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From the US Copyright Office FAQ...."As a general matter, copyright infringement occurs when a copyrighted work is reproduced, distributed, performed, publicly displayed, or made into a derivative work without the permission of the copyright owner."
I suggest you try the link below as copyright material cannot be reproduced without permission.
A permission to publish form is required when using materials reproduced from other works, particularly when held in libraries' special collections. Although associated with copyright permission, it can also address more esoteric requirements placed on the materials by library policy or even the works' donors.
How do you get a licence to sell DVD movies?
Once you have written a book, it is copyright to you. All writers copyright their own books.
To get publishing rights, you typically need to either purchase them from the original rights holder or negotiate an agreement for them. This process often involves reaching out to the copyright holder or their designated representative, such as a publishing company or licensing agency, to discuss terms and secure permission to use the content. Make sure to review and sign a contract detailing the extent of the publishing rights granted.
With permission from the copyright holder, yes.
New Directions Publishing.
Without a license, yes. Although this notice is not required, many books will include this on the copyright page:No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without prior permission from the copyright holder.
It is doubtful that copyright was 'invented' by one person. The term originated in Great Britain during the advent of the printing press, the idea behind copyright thought out by the people worried that their works could be easily reproduced by other people. The Statute of Anne in 1710 made copyright something that was regulared by the government.
A summary generally wouldn't require any kind of disclaimer. As long as you're not quoting heavily from the original material, you wouldn't be even close to infringing.If you are quoting heavily, the only disclaimer that might help would be one saying that you are quoting by permission of the copyright holder. But that will only help if you really dohave the permission of the copyright holder.
Nowhere near enough information is disclosed in the question as to WHY, HOW, or for WHAT purpose you intend to do this. However - if the game is copyrighted it cannot be reproduced and disseminated without express permission of the copyright or patent holder.