Want this question answered?
Your can publish or create anything you want as long as it isn't copyrighted or plagiarized.
The bundle of rights includes the right to copy, alter, distribute, or perform/display the work. If you write a book and give a publisher the exclusive right to publish and sell it, you still have the right to alter it: you can authorize translations or adaptations, negotiate film rights, and more.
Rights can be transferred by contract, but far more frequently you would just want a non-exclusive license to use the work.
A copyright grants exclusive right to publish and sell literary, dramatic, musical, or artistic, work, and for the use of a commercial print or label, for a specific period of time. In the case of excluded works, which I believe this question might actually be asking, titles. Titles cannot be copyrighted. So you can write another song, story or movie called The Final Countdown without violating any laws.
If that is your dream than yes. that is one persons answer. I think that you can be a writer when you are eight if you try hard and publish it, then I guess yes you can
Later in 2010, I shall publish, "Scientists Discover Hell Beneath Siberia," a comprehensive explanation of a fascinating story which has existed for 25 years, traversed the world in many languages, saturated the Internet, and mystified millions of persons. (225+ Pages, 400+ Footnotes, 2 Artistic Illustrations, Dozens of Documents/Pics, Glossary, Internet Links, Extensive Bibliography.)
Yes it is legal, on all forums the terms and conditions should warn of your IP being public and what can happen to it.
No, I do not publish adult joke books.
Current Australian copyright law is the Copyright Act 1968 as amended, particularly by the Copyright Amendment Act 2006. It is heavily influenced by British copyright law and aligns with the Berne convention. In general, it protects literary, musical, artistic, and dramatic works, as well as sound recordings, films, broadcasts, and published editions. Copyright owners (normally the creator of the work) have the exclusive rights to copy, publish, perform, and alter the work, and to "make it available" or "communicate it to the public."
Go to the page you want to publish and click the PUBLISH Button.
The past tense of "publish" is "published."
The New International Version of the Bible is published by the International Bible Society.