Three things are needed: # The copyright symbol or the word Copyrighted # The name of the copyright holder, usually your name, but could be an organization of company # The year the copyright begins.
Copyright significantly predates the CD, but nearly all CDs are protected by copyright.
It is not illegal to borrow a CD from the library and listen to it.It is a copyright violation to make a copy of the music by ripping it to iTunes. It is also illegal to burn the music files to another CD.
It is illegal because you're making a copy of something you did not pay for and are thus voiding the copyright of the CD.
Works of sufficient originality are automatically protected by copyright as soon as they are fixed in a tangible medium (more simply, songs are protected as soon as they are recorded). To sell recordings on CD Baby, you will need a mechanical license for anything that is not your own original work.
No, it should not. But that's not because of the internet (which is just a medium for sharing), but because of the copyright itself. Remove the selfish copyrights and enjoy Creative Commons. Then sharing would be promoted, not stifled for a profit. Unfortunately, that's not how it is, so if you get it from someone online or if you borrow a CD and put it in your iPod, it's violating the copyright.
You would have to get permission from the copyright holder of each song that is on the CD!
Yes; all console games are protected by copyright for 95 years.
it should detect the CD when you put it in, If not, your CPU is screwed up
Yes.
no because it is copyright and you will go to jail
Unfortunately the Kenwood KDC-C471FM does not come with CD text.
rock