Yes; the RIAA is frequently threatening to sue them.
Registration is not required for protection, and is not available in some countries. Visit the website of the copyright office for your country to see if registration is available. If it is through the copyright office directly, their web site will supply explicit directions and forms; if it is through a private registration system, the copyright office will provide links.
We can not answer this question because the material you are asking about is copyright.
yes
All forms are available from the Copyright Office website; you may also register online through their eCopyright system.
A work of sufficient originality is automatically protected as soon as it is fixed in a tangible medium; no further action is required. If formal registration is available in your country, it may be through the copyright office or a private copyright registry.
When a file is currently downloading it starts out in the 'incomplete file' folder. When it's done it is put in the 'saved' folder accesible through the library tab.
To report copyright infridgement on youwatch.org, you will want to contact customer service directly if they don't have a report button for the videos. There is not much more that can be done unless the copyright holder actually catches the material on the website. Then they can ask that it be taken down through legal action.
Auction building material can be found through various books such as Auctions for Dummies. There is also step by step information available through wiki-how.
Much of it would be licensed through other organizations rather than directly. Songs may be licensed through their respective publishers, and recordings can be licensed through the labels.
Frostwire is a downloadable website for users to share music and movies with one another. You can download just about any kind of music or movie just by doing a quick search through the software.
Yes. Distributing copyrighted material on BitTorrent, uTorrent, Vuze or Frostwire is against United States Federal law. In the US, the copyright owner has the exclusive right to determine who may distribute their copyrighted material under US Federal law 17 USC 106. 17 USC § 106 - Exclusive rights in copyrighted works Subject to sections 107 through 122, the owner of copyright under this title has the exclusive rights to do and to authorize any of the following: (1) to reproduce the copyrighted work in copies or phonorecords; (2) to prepare derivative works based upon the copyrighted work; (3) to distribute copies or phonorecords of the copyrighted work to the public by sale or other transfer of ownership, or by rental, lease, or lending; Using "filesharing" software like BitTorrent, Vuze or Frostwire violates two elements of this law because it both copies and distributes files. If you record a song, or make a movie that you own and control, you can "share" it with BitTorrent, Vuze or Frostwire and there is no problem. You cannot "share" music and movies that you do not have the rights to share. If you do so, you have opened yourself up to the threat of lawsuit. Two hundred thousand people have been sued for "sharing" copyrighted material on the internet without permission since 2010.
Consult a lawyer. IPOS focuses on reparations available through the court system, but a lawyer may be able to suggest options that would be faster, easier, and cheaper.