A business would face fines up to 5000GBP, but usually closer to real damages. In general, it's the long legal negotiation that causes the most problems; for a small business, the fines and the lawyers' fees can easily shut them down.
If copyright law did not apply to the internet, it would be nearly impossible to monetize anything on it.
You would have a legal record of the creation and creation date of your work.
In member countries of the World Trade Organization, copyright protection is automatic; registration is not required.
they would have to go to court
What would happen if you broke the Styrofoam up into lots of pieces, then threw the pieces into water?
it will be broke
you would lose all your coolant
you would get arrested.
You would die.
the egg would then become poisoned
In the US, the copyright holder can sue for up to $30,000 per infringement, or $150,000 if willfull infringement is proven. That being said, most copyright disagreements are settled long before they reach court, for an amount much closer to real damages.
No; such a derivative work would require permission from the copyright holder.