No, The Three Little Pigs is a public domain story, which means it is not protected by copyright and can be freely used and adapted by anyone.
Yes, "Little Drummer Boy" is a copyrighted song. It was written in 1941 by Katherine K. Davis, Henry Onorati, and Harry Simeone. While the original song is still under copyright, many adaptations and arrangements may have their own copyrights. However, the song has entered the public domain in certain jurisdictions and may be freely used in others, depending on local copyright laws.
Yes. They are automatically copyrighted when the owner creates the website under US Law. They no longer need the little 'C' with the circle around it for an image or piece of text to be copyrighted. Just ask permission, and you should be free and clear.
it means copyright it's the symbol for copyright
YES
Copyright is symbolised with a little c in a circle.
Little Nicky
Intellectual property laws apply on the internet. Just because something is on the internet does not mean it is in the public domain. Copyright still exists on anything created and posted on the internet, unless specified otherwise.
No, you would need to state expressly, in a signed, written contract, that you were intentionally transferring your copyright (e.g., the copyright of the software, images, sounds and other copyrightable content on the website). One could interpret "sale of a website" to mean little more than transfer of the right to control a domain name and an exclusive license for the copyrighted materials. It would be best to have a legal professional draft a proper "bill of sale" for that.
The little c in a circle is the symbol for copyright.
no
© is a symbol indicating copyright; it has been in use for a little more than 100 years.