The purpose of a person doing a registered trademark search is if the person wants to register a trademark of their own. If their action is already trademarked, it cannot be trademarked by another person.
No. Actually, the superscript TM is for designating trademarks in the US that have not yet been registered with the USPTO. If/when you get the trademark registered with the USPTO, you would use the ® instead.
FtC would refer to a registered trademark of the company that produced the ring. There are many companies which use FTC in their trademarks. USPTO dot gov has a trademark search function available.
It would be fraud to make such a claim. Only the owner of the trademark can make such a claim.
Trademark because it has the "r" with the circle after the title, which means it is federally registered as a trademark. If it was copyrigh, it would have the "c" with the circle.
It would more likely be a trademark, but there is no record for it in USPTO's Trademark Electronic Search System.
Yes the artwork would be protected as a copyrighted work and the logo would be registered as a trademark by the company.
In geometry it would indicate a radius. More generally, it would indicate a Registered Trademark.
Yes; even if it weren't registered (which it is), it would be protected by common law.
You would be seeking a registered copyright, not a trademark, and yes, you can combine multiple works on one form.
There are several online trademark catalogs precisely for this use.
The phrase "Steeler Nation" would not qualify for copyright protection. It may, however, be registered as a trademark.
No, because individual words cannot be protected by copyright. Ubisoft has, however, registered Abstergo as a trademark.