Only if the copyright is not part of the copyright registration that is copyrighted in the publication of the author's registration. But If the copyright is part of the copyright registration that is copyrighted in the publication then the copyrighted author of which publicized the copyrighted registration is not copyrighted in the legalized sense of which a publication is copyrighted. Yes, a work is always copyrighted, before and after editing and both versions.
No, because names, titles, and common words/phrases cannot be protected by copyright.
There is no such thing as "un-copyright". Something is either copyrighted or not. If it is copyrighted, then the copyright eventually expires, making it public domain.
All books are copyrighted. Under US copyright law, the act of creating automatically attaches copyright.
No. Names/titles cannot be protected by copyright. However the term "Hang Ten" is currently trademarked
No, "copywritten" is not a proper word. The correct term is "copyrighted," which refers to the legal protection of an author's work.
Ideas are not subject to copyright protection; only the expression of the ideas.
No it has no copyright on it at all.
copyrighted
No, everything on the web is not copyrighted. You have to claim copyright by placing a copyright symbol or getting a license claiming it's protected.
Certainly! Any information that a person puts out can be copyrighted. All it takes is a declaration that it is copyrighted to preserve the rights. Just place the following on the page or document: Copyright (or the copyright symbol) 2009 (year), Aggie80 (Holder of the copyright)
You can't copyright a name. "Where's Waldo?" however, is copyright!