In the short term, not much unless you are caught. In the long term, increased prices on legal uses. For example, the more people pirate movies, the more expensive movie tickets and downloads get in the future.
yes 69 people have currently been sued due to copyright infringment however most of them didnt have savere consequences, if any at all.
Simple answer.... NO. This is a big copyright and trademark infringment.
Any owner of a copyright can sue for infringement as long as the copyright is still valid (i.e., for 95 years from publication).
In the US, infringement carries a statutory fine of $750 to $30,000 per infringement.
Yes; violation of a federal law would be punishable under Article 134.
If the record label doesn't want you to use their music on your video.
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."
It depends on the overall similarity, the commonality of the power, the mood of the rightsholder, and more.
No. That's copyright infringment, get that band's permission and it's a yes.
They sued napster for copyright infringment. And I think they won that law suit too. Napster is a online free music download site.
Unless there is a crossover between Marvel and DC, some blatant copyright infringment, or something to do with I'm a Marvel and I'm a DC? No. No he does not.
If you own the rights to the software, then no, of course it's not illegal. However it's copyright infringment if you do not own the software.