The copy-written material can be sent "self-addressed" to yourself, via registered mail, and kept sealed/dated in order to establish time stamp ownership.
In most counties you only need to do one thing: record your creative work of original authorship in a tangible form. Then the copyright is free, instantaneous and automatic; registration is completely optional.
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Do I need to submit a different copyright application for each work that I do.
Not necessarily. The release date can be well after the copyright date.
No; it was written in 1872, and is in the public domain. Only the Vaughan Williams setting of the tune is protected.
You would need to contact the copyright holder or their designated agent. They are the only ones who can legally do anything about the infringement. Reporting it to anyone else is a waste of time and effort.
Frankly, it's not possible to enforce copyright law completely. The government really only seeks out large-scale importers, and content owners generally only sue when they know it'd be worth their while. At the lowest level, copyright is more of an ethical issue: as a user, will you do the right thing, even if you know you won't get caught?
Only copy, alter, distribute, or perform/display works that are entirely yours, or for which you have a license.
There is no such thing as "un-copyright". Something is either copyrighted or not. If it is copyrighted, then the copyright eventually expires, making it public domain.
Copyright is an expensive thing I dont think that they can afford F1 copyright so they gave up
The word Copyright should always be capitalized. It is a specific name for a specific thing.
The actual product does not have the copyright marks. Mine is really cool