No. Copyright protects original works of authorship including literary, dramatic, musical, and artistic works. It can include poetry, novels, movies, songs, computer software, and architecture. Copyright will not protect names, titles, common words/phrases, facts, ideas, systems, or methods of operation.
Yes, facts themselves cannot be copyrighted, but the way they are presented or arranged can be.
Facts themselves are not copyrighted, as they are considered to be part of the public domain. However, the way in which facts are presented or arranged may be subject to copyright protection.
Names and titles can not normally be copyrighted. All those things which occur in nature and facts cannot be copyrighted.
"Facts" cannot be copyrighted. However, the selection and arrangement of facts in a creative structure can be copyrighted. If all you do is extract facts and present them in a new format, then you probably have not infringed the copyright of the original.
Facts cannot be copyrighted because they are considered to be part of the public domain and are not considered original works of authorship. Copyright protection only applies to original creative works that are fixed in a tangible form of expression.
Only if the copyright is not part of the copyright registration that is copyrighted in the publication of the author's registration. But If the copyright is part of the copyright registration that is copyrighted in the publication then the copyrighted author of which publicized the copyrighted registration is not copyrighted in the legalized sense of which a publication is copyrighted. Yes, a work is always copyrighted, before and after editing and both versions.
Yes, Minecraft is copyrighted.
no brain-freeze is not copyrighted
Yes Times is copyrighted
RIMM is copyrighted.
it was copyrighted but it does not show on google.
The game itself is copyrighted. The stories and legends about him may not necessarily be copyrighted unless it was created in recent years.