The United States Marines logo copyright is of course owned by the United States Marine Corps. They even have their own division to deal with the improper use of their logo in media and sales.
No. In the US that requirement was changed in 1989
(in the US) It can't be done for free. There is, at the very least, a filing and recording fee.
The photographer owns the copyright of any photograph unless there is a written and signed agreement with a client that states otherwise. If the photographer is an employee of someone else and being paid for his employment, then the employer is legally the "author" and owns the copyright, under US law. It is quite possible, and often the case, that a person may own the only copy of a photograph but someone else owns the entire copyright but no copies.
Upon Ionesco's death, unless other arrangements were made, copyright would have transferred to his daughter. The US publisher seems to be Grove Press.
You cannot copyright a logo in Philadelphia or anywhere else. Names, titles, common words/phrases, slogans., logos, etc do not qualify for copyright protection. In some cases, however, they may be eligible for registration as trademarks. All the necessary information can be found on the US Patent & Trademark website at the related link below.
US Marines were withdrawn from Lebanon.The marines were withdrawn from Lebanon A+ answerThe Marines were withdrawn from Lebanon
the marines protect us from the air
Yes, under US copyright laws, creative works of authorship by officers or employees of the federal government have no copyright, making them public domain. However, not everything published by the US government was created by the federal government and other authors or publishers may retain copyright ownership. For example, an author could license the US to publish something or the US could contract to have some work created, where the independent contractor owns the copyright.
Logo gives the channel it's identity. And personally I think make the process of claiming copyright indirectly easier.We chose to name the channel "Logo" because we wanted a name that people could make their own and give it personal meaning. For us, the word "logo" is about identity, about being comfortable in your own skin. It's about being who you are
Continental Marines.
If it was formally filed and probably was the US copyright site has a search function to show who owns the work. If not filed creator owns for 75 years.
Approximately 391,000 US Marines served in the Vietnam War; approximately 14,838 US Marines died in Vietnam.