A website page or Terms of Service or other written material might have a "Copyright Notice" posted in some form, either with the word "copyright" or a capital C inside a circle, which is the symbol for "copyright".
Most notices follow a set format, such as "Copyright (or symbol) The Company's Name (or Author's Name), year." Some notices give a full date, such as, May 1, 2012.
"All copyright, proprietary notices, or labels" may include instructive comments, such as the one in your question, and means "However this company or individual has written the copyright notice and instructions."
"Maintained in their original format" means you *must* copy the Copyright Statement and Instructive Statement in full, as is written.
So if you use that work/article on your website, (IF it states you can copy it), you must also copy the Copyright Statement and Instructive Statement in full, as is written and put it on the same webpage where you placed the work/writing.
NOTE, students in secondary or post-secondary school may need to re-format the details of the source information to fit a Style, such as APA Style.
Goods and services are protected by trademark rather than copyright; copyright protects original creative works. For the purposes of trademark registration, goods and services are divided into categories ranging from chemicals to personal services.
The two original types of colonies were Charter and Proprietary colonies
Copyright law.
They were run by royal, charter, and proprietary. Most were run by royal.
Anyone who creates an original work is using copyright to protect it.
An assignment should be registered where the original copyright was registered.
An infringement of the original authors' copyright.
The original work remains in the public domain; copyright in the new work is not a renewal of the original protection: it is an entirely new copyright. For example, if I do a new translation of the Dead Sea Scrolls, I control copyright over my translation, but the original texts are still in the public domain. If I record a performance of a Bach chorale, I control copyright over that recording, but the original work is still in the public domain.
Typically, the documents will be "original" enough to be protected by copyright automatically.
The image is still owned by and under copyright by the original creator of the photographer who created the ORIGINAL image. Taking a photo of someone else's photo does not transfer the copyright to you (the iPhone owner).
Proprietary colonies and charter colonies.
Unless other arrangements were made, the creator is the initial copyright holder.