Yes, although if your song follows the storyline of the book too closely, it might be considered a derivative work, which would require a license.
If you write a Nancy Drew book and publish it without permission from the copyright owner, you could face a lawsuit for copyright infringement. Nancy Drew is a trademarked character and franchise owned by the publisher, so it is important to obtain proper licensing or permissions before using the character in your own work.
No ... that is copyright infringement and could be punishable by law. It may be possible, if you state your reasons why you want to use it, like for a school crafts project, they may give you permission. You'll never know unless you write to them.
Not as long as it is truthful and you can prove everything you say. Truth is a shield.
No, only the creator can copyright material. You would be writing fanfiction, which cannot be published or sold.
Without the leading zero: 9057606387
No because it is trademark But you can write a show similar to it without using iCarly or the names of the characters
Not without explicit permission of the copyright holder. The name 'James Bond' is "owned."
Click the link. Just remember that you can't write a sequel to someone else's book and actually sell it! That's copyright infringement.
Not necessarily, if you do not get permission from Nintendo or Shigeru Miyamoto, then you will trigger an event called a copyright infringement, and pay from a range of $200 to $150,000, go to jail, or both. If you get permission, then you can publish the book. Or, to avoid all of that, you can write the story on www (dot) Fanfiction (dot) net, but you must put a disclaimer (Something that says you do not own something) on every chapter, which must be visible directly after loading the page.P.S. It is not plagiarism, it is an infringement of copyright.
There is little that can be done beyond providing a proper notification on each work (for digital materials, this can be included in code or metadata as well). Beyond that, it's worth your time to be proactive about seeking out infringement and acting upon it. If formal registration is available in your country, you may wish to make use of it, although it is not required for protection.
Copy-write infringement on there Pokemon song
Write: Copyright 2011 by Your Name Even that isn't required. If you created it and can prove it, you own the copyright. If you intend to bring suit, you have to fill out the forms and pay the fee to the US government (if you live in the US).