Please report it by clicking "Report Abuse" in the upper right corner of the answer page. Then select the "Plagiarism / Copyright Infringement" option and click "Send Report."
Generally yes it it. The requirement to list a copyright notice in order to be protected was discontinued over 20 years ago.
Under US law a copyright notice has not necessary since 1989, for a work to be protected
It definitely is NOT. Many companies post images, logos, and stories that are copyrighted. MOST government websites have content that is not copyrighted, some will have content that IS copyrighted, and used with permission of the owner. When reading an article, or viewing images, scroll down- you may see a notice that says something like "All rights reserved" and the c in a circle symbol that means copyrighted- and a date. That is NOT public domain.
Only if the copyright is not part of the copyright registration that is copyrighted in the publication of the author's registration. But If the copyright is part of the copyright registration that is copyrighted in the publication then the copyrighted author of which publicized the copyrighted registration is not copyrighted in the legalized sense of which a publication is copyrighted. Yes, a work is always copyrighted, before and after editing and both versions.
Yes, Minecraft is copyrighted.
No notice is required on any copyrighted materials in any country or by citizens of any country that follows the Berne Convention, or in the USA for materials first published by US authors after 1988. 17 USC § 401.
Yes, Answers.com data is under copyright. See the copyright notice at the bottom of each page.
Yes Times is copyrighted
no brain-freeze is not copyrighted
it was copyrighted but it does not show on google.
RIMM is copyrighted.
Depends upon when and where they were published, but you have to assume they are copyrighted unless you can prove otherwise. For instance, anything published in the USA since 1989 is automatically copyrighted for 95 years even if it doesn't have any copyright notice on it, or for 70 years after the author's death if the author is an individual and not an employee of someone else.