Works of sufficient originality are automatically protected by copyright as soon as they are fixed in a tangible medium (more simply, songs are protected as soon as they are recorded). To sell recordings on CD Baby, you will need a mechanical license for anything that is not your own original work.
Copyright significantly predates the CD, but nearly all CDs are protected by copyright.
Three things are needed: # The copyright symbol or the word Copyrighted # The name of the copyright holder, usually your name, but could be an organization of company # The year the copyright begins.
You would have to get permission from the copyright holder of each song that is on the CD!
CD Baby was created in 1997.
Yes; all console games are protected by copyright for 95 years.
Yes.
no because it is copyright and you will go to jail
You can A) hire an agent or a lawyer to pitch your CD to a record label executive (record labels do not listen to unsolicited materials so an agent or a lawyer is required) or B) you can copyright and distribute the CD yourself through channels like CDBaby.com. CD Baby allows you to distribute your music via CDs (at your own expense) or through mp3 downloads through third party music vendors like Spotify and iTunes. CD Baby is a great way to get your music out to the masses. It is fairly inexpensive, easy to use, and takes the hassle out of the how and where factor when it comes to distribution. There are also links to sites that help you copyright your music for a small fee.
The game Monopoly is controlled by Hasbro.
Baby's in black is on the Hi-Fi's cd :)
Yes. You are willfully duplicating a protected work without the permission of the copyright holder.
Only if the CD is being used as a backup for your collection and you will not distribute it commercially.