The Copyright Act, the Counterfeit Goods Act, and the Trademarks Act are three separate acts of South African legislation.
No, it should not. If you wrote something, you own the copyright on it. All you need in order to assert that copyright is proof that you wrote something.
Depends on the person who wrote it.
Yes, unless you copyright it.
you have to register them with a publishing company , who will collect royalties and protect the copyright
J. W. Vaughan copyright 1933
Copyright makes books and is the were you can turn in books to publish them in to your books that you wrote and CopyRight is the system of all book making
It depends on whether you have the right or not. If you control the copyright to something (i.e., you drew/painted/wrote it), you have the exclusive right to copy it or authorize others to do so. If you do not control the copyright, you need an exemption in the law or permission from the copyright holder.
If you like. There's no benefit from doing so.
According to Copyright Encyclopedia Music-Christian Roudey, Words-Martin Charnin.
The copyright is held by Neville Holder and James Lea of Slade
According to "The Baptist Hymnal", copyright 1991, this song is a traditional African-American spiritual.
theres no c in trademarkC is actually a copyright symbol. An example would be if you wrote a song and wanted to register it with the United States Copyright office, then you would see that c symbol following the year and the author's name or company.