A major copyright shift just made Betty Boop’s earliest version free to use — but merch sellers should read the fine print.
The gym chain part-owned by Beau Ryan did not have a licence to play songs such as We Like To Party, Booty Bounce, and Wake Me Up.
The moon and sun share top billing in 2026. Kicking off the year’s cosmic wonders is the moon, drawing the first astronauts ...
Brigitte Bardot, whose image defined an era of cinema and style, has died at 91, leaving behind a legacy captured in some of ...
Three and a half years after the now David Ellison -owned studio was first buzz-sawed by a Top Gun: Maverick copyright infringement lawsuit from the estate of the journalist who penned the piece upon ...
Beloved characters entering the public domain with the new year include Blondie, Dagwood, Dick and Jane and Nancy Drew, but ...
A hastily applied sticker was spotted Tuesday morning, restoring the name of the alleged day care facility to “Quality ...
Across Australia, forests are quietly changing. Trees that once stood for decades or centuries are now dying at an accelerating rate. And this is not because of fire, storms, or logging. The chronic ...
When OpenAI proposed producing 20 million anonymized ChatGPT logs in the sprawling AI copyright litigation against it, the ...
The sprawling legal fight over tech companies' vast copying of copyrighted material to train their artificial intelligence ...
Venezuelans are trying to understand who is in charge after the United States announced the capture of President Nicolás ...
A federal appeals court ruled that the Tom Cruise blockbuster did not infringe an article that inspired the original 1986 ...