A list of puns related to "Copyright symbol"
I see a lot of people do this on facebook and instagram even on crappy photos of random objects as if someones going to steal it and not give them credit. It just ruins the image for me when I see a big logo on it. Some βphotographersβ put them smack dab in the middle at 50% opacity like theyre scared someones going to steal their pic of a lake from their local park.
No one is going to steal your candid photo of your friend drinking and doing the middle finger even if the photo was shot in f/1.2 with lots of bokeh⦠unless your friend was Leonardo Dicaprio lol.
Though if people did screenshot or save I think apps should implement a feature like reddit to give credit to the original source if reposted. It should overlap the image or you could click the image and see where it has been posted previously. This would help a lot with not being vulnerable to catfishes.
Iβve seen so many people use the symbol for businesses and in many other forms, and wanted to know if someone could just use it or had to go through a process to use it legally?
Hello! I am still fairly new to using LaTeX without templates, so apologies if this is a noob question. I want to create a cookbook where one of the lines has has the copyright symbol in front of the date, like this:
Β© Draft Date: August 11, 2021
My code for this is the following:
\documentclass{article}
\usepackage[utf8]{inputenc}
\title{Comprehensive Cookbook}
\author{N. Gurnard}
\date{\textcopyright & \textit{Draft Date: \today}}
\begin{document}
\maketitle
\end{document}
I get an error saying " You have placed an alignment tab character '&' in the wrong place. If you want to align something, you must write it inside an align environment such as \begin{align} β¦ \end{align}, \begin{tabular} β¦ \end{tabular}, etc. If you want to write an ampersand '&' in text, you must write \& instead. " It still compiles though so I'm not sure if this is just an Overleaf thing or what. Does anybody have any suggestions?
Eg for national flags, national anthems, national pledges, national emblems. How do other countries deal with the commercial/ artistic/ digital use of national symbols by the community? Are national symbols of other countries protected by copyrights?
On my Microsoft keyboard, I've got a special key with emoji on it, which opens a dialog box with emojis, so π you can easily type π them on fly, even in places which normally don't have the ability to paste smiles (YouTube comments, Reddit, etc.).
That's so much wonderful that I can't stop thinking about having a program that would open a similar box by a shortcut, or even re-bind this key. But, instead of smiles, it shows special characters, like currency symbols (Β£, β½, βΉ), trademark (Β©), math symbols (Ο, β, β).
That would ease my like that much... Does anyone have something in mind?
P. S.
I'm aware of built-in Character Map on Windows, but, honestly, it's a piece of rubbish that is impossible to use easily and "on fly".
UPD:
After searching myself for a while, I found an old program called CatchChar. It basically just adds a shortcut that opens up the menu with customizable characters. The problem is that it's too old and too buggy to use on a daily basis. But it's the best I've found so far. Still looking for the satisfying answer, though.
UPD 2:
u/liquidhot proposed WinCompose tools, which quite does what I was trying to achieve.
Thanks to u/GetawayDreamer87 and u/nerdshark as well for the tip that you can do what I need via Emoji bar, I didn't know that there's a tab for the symbols that I need.
Hi there! I'm trying to get a simple skull and crossbones symbol with a red, circle background in SVG format to use in a book. I need the copyright as the book will hopefully be printed. Some examples of what I'm looking for include:
https://pngimage.net/poison-icon-png-2/
and
Price is negotiable. Looking forward to hearing from folks!
Edit: Position is filled. Thanks for applying, everyone!
The title, essentially. Everyone knows the symbols that are used on media players for the different actions you can do. But who first made and used them? Were they claimed? Does this mean any company that uses them on whatever media player they make are liable to be sued or something?
I'm not entirely clear about whether USB counts as a brand or trademark, including the logos, so figured someone here may know. Specifically, I'm thinking the shape of the port (USB-A), the three arrow icon, and the abbreviation "USB". As far as I'm aware, some names are trademarked (USB-Cβ’ and SuperSpeedβ’, I believe), but idk to which extent the hurdles for labelling a USB product as such would apply to tattoos.
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