Akami-chan wrote:Devilish wrote:not to be a butt or anything, but wouldnt the alice in wonderland snail go to copyright? o3oAs of now, the heart-shaped snails seem to be sterile.
Designs with copyrighted material (Pokemon, Harry Potter) may not be bred.Yeah, I was thinking about it and it's probably not a good idea to breed that one =/
The idea isn't Disney's or Tim Burton's but it does belong to someone XP My bad
Coy wrote:because the guy's dead right? ^^
Coy wrote:Always have been cuteblueroo C;
Q: Are the books and the pictures still copyright protected?
A: No. When the Alice books were published, they were copyright protected until 42 years after the first publication or 7 years after the author's death, whichever was the longer. Later, the 1911 Act replaced the 1842 Copyright Act which extended the period to 50 years after the author's death.
This means that the copyright on "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland" subsisted until 1907 and that of "Through the Looking-Glass and what Alice found there" until 1948. As Tenniel died in 1914, his illustrations came out of copyright in 1964.
Disney's cartoon movie still remains in copyright. If you wish to use movie stills, video, audio, or anything else from the movie, you'll need to ask permission from Disney Consumer Products.
http://www.alice-in-wonderland.net/alice11.html#9
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