This request is related to this previous blacklist request and The Great Legal Cleanup™, but this meta post was requested to address the specific questions involved.
There are two questions that are still around with copyright, but they are locked so the cleanup (which started last year) can never be completed. This is because locked questions cannot be modified or flagged, so the tag cannot be dropped from them, which means that the tags can never be burninated.
Can someone copyright a SQL query? was created in December of 2009, when Stack Overflow was more accepting of broad questions which should really be asked to a lawyer. The first few answers explain how they can get around the "copyright" issues, and the next few answers take guesses at the situation.
This is a pretty specific question (even if it may seem broad), but even looking around on Google gives you a few answers to the question. So at this point, Stack Overflow is not the only source of possible answers to this question.
Pirated software at a company? was a question asked in May of 2009, which got 8 FGITW answers and was closed within the first 5 minutes. After a close war, it was eventually left open for a few years until it got the current historical lock and was closed.
Again, a quick search for the title gives a large number of better sources of information. This Stack Overflow question isn't even at the top of the list anymore.
Both of these questions have been modified a few times after being locked to drop some of the tags from them, so those tags could later be burninated. At this point, after dropping copyright, neither question is going to have a set of useful tags (and one question only has tags set to be burninated). Because it's generally agreed that historically locked questions are one step away from deletion, I believe we should take the final step and delete both of these questions.
Note that questions about copyright are off-topic on Stack Overflow because they aren't actually programming questions, and Stack Overflow isn't a community of copyright lawyers. That isn't something I'm interested in debating here.