To copyright a quote, you can simply write it down and include the copyright symbol (), the year, and your name. This will provide you with legal protection for your original quote.
Copyright limits the extent to which you can quote existing works, but it also protects your completed work.
Yes, you generally need permission to quote someone in your work to avoid potential copyright infringement.
To copyright quotes, you can include them in a larger work that you register for copyright protection. This will protect the quotes as part of the overall work. Additionally, you can also register individual quotes with the U.S. Copyright Office, but keep in mind that the quote must be original and meet the requirements for copyright protection.
You should be able to quote things that Lady Chatterley's lover has said without copyright permission. However when quoting this you will have to make sure that you put how said it and do not claim it as your own.
You may quote a snippet of the lyrics in the novel. But you may not write the whole song in the book without permission from the copyright holder.
When you directly quote what someone else has written without their written consent. When you offer free downloading of a popular song that was just released or is still in copyright (95 years in most cases).
To request copyright permission for a Disney property, write to the Permissions Department at the Disney organization. However, there is a 'fair use' doctrine in copyright that permits a limited amount of use without permission. While it is not precisely defined, this is the provision that allows a writer to quote a few lines from a book or movie in a review without seeking permission. Two lines from a film may well be 'fair use' and quoting such a small part of the work would not then require permission of the copyright holder.
You would need to obtain copyright permission from the estate of Will Rogers or the entity that currently administers his intellectual property rights. They would be the authorized party to grant permission for using his quote "I never met a man I didn't like."
Probably not. Almost everything has a copyright claim to it, so stay on the safe side and cite your sources with pictures and quote or don't copy the writing you find. You can do that as long as you don't make any money off of it.
You would need to be the rightsholder for the image (or license it), and the words would need to be reasonably short and property attributed.
Copyright law includes the concept of "fair use". You do not have an unlimited right to reprint anything you like as long as you give the correct attribution; you could not reprint a whole book that is under copyright, unless you obtain permission, or even a whole chapter of a book, but you can quote small sections of the book, giving the correct source for your quote. It is often necessary to quote what others have said, in order to be able to discuss it accurately.
"Copyright in fragment" is a common misspelling of "copyright infringement," which is the violation of copyright.