Copyright text is basically anything that someone else has written. You cannot use copyright text unless the owner has given you permission.
Written works of sufficient originality are automatically protected as soon as they are fixed in a tangible medium. Oh and hi carlos
Text is not copyright-free unless it was created or published so long ago that the copyright has expired, or if the text does not qualify as having sufficient "creative work of original authorship" to trigger any copyright protection.
Millions of text documents and other works are copyright 2009.
The copyright date is the year the text was completed. It may or may not be the same as the publication date.
No, the images and text are in the public domain.
For the most part, you can assume that a given text or image is protected by copyright unless explicitly stated otherwise. Protection is automatic, and the term of protection is quite long. The real challenge is in finding out who the copyright belongs to.
Materials are not required to have a notification on them in order to be protected.
Three things are needed: # The copyright symbol or the word Copyrighted # The name of the copyright holder, usually your name, but could be an organization of company # The year the copyright begins.
The year of copyright, for the original text by Cornelia Funke, was 2000, but the English translation was copyrighted in 2002.
Generally, the text on a bumper sticker would be too short to qualify for copyright protection.
If necessary, it would simply precede the notification as usual. However bibliographic information such as copyright is rarely included in text blocks; it's more often seen in footnotes or endnotes.
The copyright information is generally on the reverse of the title page, and the bibliography is generally at the end of the text, before the index.
Everything you write or create automatically has a copyright. However, the terms of service of most forum accounts require that you forfeit your copyright. Furthermore, claiming copyright on a forum post would be fairly pointless, as most copyright claims are only legally actionable if their is proof of commercial damages.