New works are protected for the life of the author plus 50 years in most countries (the US has extended this to 70 years).
Yes, it was first published in 1939, meaning its copyright will expire 95 years later.
Yes, it is possible that they may expire. The United States copyright law governs that corporations will be able to protect their copyrights to content like video games for at least 75 years.
2006.
Publishing rights for 'Snow Bros' are owned by Capcom and Romstar. Software copyrights expire 50-70+ years after the creator's death, depending on the copyright law in each respective country. Snow Bros copyright will expire in 2040 at the absolute minimum.
2032, assuming there are no additional term extensions.
No, unless the settings of the hymns are entirely new for that publication. In certain countries, most notably Germany, the particular engraving can be protected separately. For the most part, though, an 18th-century hymn stays an 18th-century hymn.
In most cases, for work published after 1923, copyright will expire at the end of the calendar year 70 years after the death of the original author.
The copyright is held (or at least claimed) by the state of Bavaria. However, it will expire seventy years after Hitler's death.
It is not yet in the public domain. The music was written in the 1960's so the copyright won't expire for a long time.
Copyright is instantaneous Trademark has to be applied for Copyright cannot be "lost" Trademarks must be "vigorously" defended Copyright has a fixed term Trademarks have a variable term Copyrights expire and cannot be renewed Trademarks can be renewed indefinetly
The copyright to Mein Kampf is owned by the Free State of Bavaria, as the book's copyright was transferred to the state of Bavaria after World War II. The copyright is set to expire in 2025, at which point the book will enter the public domain.
The logo is registered as a trademark, and can be protected in perpetuity as long as it is in use.