As a product, a Patent would be the best form of protection and these can be applied for nationally or internationally.
A trademark is applied to something used in relation to branding and copyright is more often associated with intellectual property
There may be a trademark on a particular brand, but not hats in general. Copyright famously does not protect fashion.
Typically you would want to protect your product through trademark or (if it's an invention) patent law, rather than copyright. The US Patent and Trademark Office has very clear walkthroughs on its website (link below); outside the US, your country's trademark and/or patent office likely has a similar process.
you can neither trademark nor copyright a body treatment. You could trademark the name of the treatment or copyright an illustration, written description, or film of the treatment. To protect a method of operation you would have to seek a patent.
TM is for a trademark and the R is for copyright. A copyright is used to protect art, literary works, and music. Gone with the Wind would be copyrighted. A trademark is a symbol, name, image, (etc.) that identifies a service or product. Like Pepsi has their logo, Playboy has the playboy bunny, etc.
No; ideas are not copyrightable, and products are protected by patent and/or trademark as applicable.Added: Since the question was not answered by the above contributor. . . Copyright laws protect the intellectual work that was produced by those who created it.
You cannot copyright a single word, as copyright protection is typically granted to original works of authorship like books, music, and artwork. However, you may be able to trademark a word or phrase to protect it as a brand or logo associated with your business or product. To do this, you would need to file a trademark application with the appropriate government agency, such as the United States Patent and Trademark Office.
The copyright symbol is used to protect original works like books, music, and art, while the trademark symbol is used to protect brand names, logos, and slogans. Copyright protects creative works, while trademarks protect brand identity.
Products such as the Kinect are protected by trademark and patent rather than copyright (which would protect individual games, for example). Microsoft filed for a US patent January 20, 2009, registered a trademark April 29, 2010, and released the product in November 2010.
No, but it could be a TRADEMARK infringement. Copyright does not protect names.
The trademark for the company Commercial Blinds is a regular trade mark. A trademark is used to protect small business owners from copyright and other things.
Neither Copyright nor Patent law protect domain names.
No, you cannot copyright a voice for commercial use. However, you can protect a voice through trademark or contract agreements.