This usage would require a synchronization license, which can be difficult and expensive to obtain. Many publishers have online request forms.
No you can't, once someone has already written and copyrighted it, you can't
Anything new that someone writes can be copyrighted. Technically a work is automatically copyrighted once it is created unless the author explicitly abandons copyright in the work.
If you download this answer, it is not copyrighted. If you send a letter to a newspaper, it is not copyrighted. You knew their rules and intended it for their publication. If you copied a page out of a copyrighted book and sent it to someone else, you sent copyrighted material. If you draw a picture and do not sign it, you give the person receiving it permission to copy it. If you sign it, it becomes copyrighted. The law is complicated.Downloading a work protected by copyright is copyright infringement unless you have a license.____________________________________________________________________Yes. The law is complicated. That is why copyright lawyers make good money!
Yes, unless you have their permission to record a live musical performance, it would be a copyright infringement. Similarly, if they do not have permission to perform and record their rendition of a copyrighted composition, your recording of their performance would be a copyright violation and uploading it anywhere would be a further violation (unauthorized publication of an unauthorized recording).
You can't do anything ... Copyrighted media is just that - copyrighted - which means it belongs to someone else and you do not have the rights to reproduce it without their express written permission.
If you mean "Can you sell a pattern copyrighted by someone else?" the answer is yes but only with permission. If you mean "Can I create a pattern from scratch, copyright it and sell it?" the answer is yes.
No. Unless a "fair use" exception applies use of someone elses copyrighted property without permisson is the definition of copyright infringement.
If you plan to use someone else's copyrighted work in your own work, such as using a section of a book or a piece of artwork, you should seek copyright permission. If you plan to reproduce and distribute someone else's copyrighted work, such as publishing it or making copies to sell, you should seek copyright permission. If your use of someone else's copyrighted work falls outside of fair use guidelines, which include factors such as the purpose and character of your use, the nature of the copyrighted work, the amount and substantiality of the portion used, and the effect of your use on the potential market for the copyrighted work, you should seek copyright permission.
It depends on the copyright owner. Some copyright owners are more lenient than others when it comes to cover videos.
It depends on who owns the trademark (you or someone else), the nature of the copyrighted work, and how you're using the trademark in the work.
The reproduction or use of someone else's copyright material without permission or license.Copyright infringement is the unauthorized or prohibited use of works under copyright, infringing the copyright holder's exclusive rights, such as the right to reproduce or perform the copyrighted work, or to make derivative works.
If your partner is infringing someone else's copyright, he is in violation of federal law.