You may be reading it wrong: M is 1000, CM means subtract 100 from 1000, but then C is adding 100 again. MCMCVI would be a terribly awkward way of writing 2006.
It may perhaps be MCMLVI, which is 1956.
The book has a copyright. The music has a copyright. The musical production has copyright. The movie has a copyright. The sound track has a copyright. Music not used in the movie has copyright. The play was first produced on Broadway in 1957, meaning it is copyrighted until 95 years later. The movie was produced in 1962 and has 95 years of copyright. The sound recordings of the music produced prior to 1973 have no federal copyright but are protected by state laws until 2067, not including those works that were also part of the 1962 dramatic audiovisual work, which are covered by federal copyright for 95 years.
No; Vermeer predates copyright protection by about 50 years.
Copyright protection extends to the end of the calendar year 70 years past the death of the author.
Yes; all console games are protected by copyright for 95 years.
Term of copyright is for the life of the creator plus 70 years.
Under US copyright law, a copyright cannot be renewed after it expires. For works of US authors published in the US prior to 1963, copyright renewal had to be filed after 28 years.
"Life plus 20 years" refers to the duration of copyright protection, which lasts for the life of the creator plus an additional 20 years after their death. This means that the copyright on a work remains in effect for 20 years after the creator passes away.
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.
for your sentence time in jail for breaking the copyright law, you may get 89 years!
© is a symbol indicating copyright; it has been in use for a little more than 100 years.
Copyright term for software in India is 60 years from the date of publication.
If you are not the composer of the song then you can NEVER take the copyright as yours; you would have to purchase it from the copyright owners. Also, when the copyright expires, 50 or more years after the author's death (or after publication, depending upon circumstances and national laws) it is no longer copyrighted at all and nobody can possibly own the copyright.