As with most legal questions the answers is... it depends. Works published between 1923 and 1964 and not renewed are now in the public domain. For works published after 1964 renewal was automatic provided that, (until 1989) a copyright notice was provided.
Copyright is a federal law; the Copyright Office is part of the Library of Congress, which is overseen by Congress.
Research papers will likely not run into any copyright violations but may run into plagiarism issues. Copying text from a website is considered plagiarism and is looked down upon by many educational institutions and instructors.
You would probably run into copyright issues as Twitter was originally called that by the creators.
Certainly you can, but any reproduction of a document still under copyright is a violation of copyright law, whether or not it is in print. For works copyrighted after 1963, copyrights run for a minimum of 95 years. Be careful.
Copyright laws are different ranging from different countries and companies. Such laws can usually be found can be found from government run websites or from governmental buildings that offer information about laws.
"Copyright in fragment" is a common misspelling of "copyright infringement," which is the violation of copyright.
Jack lovelock ran... Hang on that is what I'm trying to fInd out from answers.com please can someone answer that for me Please AND THIS IS COPYRIGHT!
license agreement
"A copyright attorney provides legal counsel regarding copyright law. A copyright attorney could be an asset in assisting a client obtain and registering a copyright, transfering ownership of a copyright, helping avoid copyright violations, and protecting the client's own copyright. Although any attorney may counsel regarding copyright law, copyright attorneys can be a great asset where specific copyright issues are addressed."
Different jurisdictions have various opinions on when the song "Happy Birthday to You" will enter the public domain. In European Union (EU) countries the copyright in the song will expire December 31, 2016 however the current copyright holder, Walter Chappel, claims that based on his 1935 purchase of the rights the copyright won't expire until 2030.
Copyright is a noun, or an adjective as in the phrase "copyright protection."
it means copyright it's the symbol for copyright