In the Philippines, copyright protection generally lasts for the lifetime of the author plus 50 years after their death. If the work is a joint creation, the copyright lasts for 50 years after the death of the last surviving author. For works created by corporate authors or anonymous works, the copyright lasts for 50 years from the date of publication, with a maximum term of 75 years from creation. After these periods, the work enters the public domain.
95 years from creation.
Copyright term for software in India is 60 years from the date of publication.
Generally, at least under US Law, copyright protection extends 70 years past the death ot the author/creator of the work.
In Australia, protection exists for the life of the creator plus 70 years.
It varies from country to country. The minimum for members of the World Trade Organization is the life of the creator plus 50 years; the US and several other countries have extended this to life plus 70 years.
Start by trying to determine the date, who was the photographer (or photographer's employer), and whether the photograph was ever published. Then see the related question, "How long does a copyright last?"
Copyright can be bought, sold, or transferred at any time during its duration.
Until 2005, works were protected for the life of the creator plus 50 years. This was extended to life plus 70 years, but copyright was not revived on works that were already in the public domain.
2009, Scholastic.
2003.
The copyright date in the Last Olympian is 2009. It doesn't give an exact day, it only says the year. This is what it says exactly, "Copyright C (C is in a circle) by Rick Riordan".
Yes, you can copyright a slogan as long as it meets the requirements for copyright protection, such as being original and creative.