125 legal [2, *]questions have been posted about intellectual property by real users in New York. Ask your question and dive into the knowledge of attorneys who handle your issue regularly. Similar topics to explore also include copyrights, intellectual property licensing, and patents. All topics and other states can be accessed in the dropdowns below.
Recent Legal Answers
The registration of a trademark is based upon the filing of an application, not a judgment of competing claims to the rights to the underlying mark.
You do not say what your doubt is regarding patents so i cannot answer. Also, there is no such thing as an international patent. It is an... Read Answer
Against what? Fitness articles rarely result in violence. Do you plan to make negative comments about individuals or clubs?
Not grey at all. Each image is subject to copyright.
Trademark protection is granted to something that serves as an indicator of the origin of a product or service. While your posting is at best opaque... Read Answer
An idea is not protected by copyright.
" Is it legal to translate a whole website content and publish it ? Is it legal if I translate a website such as w3schools.com to my language... Read Answer
That's impossible to determine.
You'd need to be an attorney to know how to draft a licensing agreement. As to price, the first question is what the proposed use of the material is.... Read Answer
It might be prudent to have it reviewed.
Whether a mark is registrable or not is a fact specific inquiry. An attorney would need to know the specific mark as well as the class in which... Read Answer
The question does not come up because no one attempts to enforce copyrights/trademark rights against an individual that makes one t-shirt. You... Read Answer
You don't need to charge - but you can.
It's hard to see how you could be arrested. You might be sued for trademark violations.
Technically the e-mails are copyrighted. But unless he reprints the e-mails word for word it would be very difficult to prove a violation.
If you had nothing to do with it your options are to ignore the letter or write them back and tell them the story. Johnson and Pham is notorious for... Read Answer
Maybe, because we don't do law school homework here.
It's technically possible - but from your question it seems you don't really understand copyright and what that right actually means to you.
No, you can not take someone else's product and pass it off as your own.
I'd bet that it's not copyright but trademark infringement that's involved. Whether their claim is valid or not can't be determined from the little... Read Answer
You can't trademark a domain name except under unusual circumstances.
Without specifics no one will be able to tell you.
No. Nothing in litigation of that type bars you from travel.