Ivan the Dictator:
I came here to adapt a series of The Adventures of Tintin, but, I may expect that if I don't have permission to do so, I will be in critical trouble regarding with the law.
If you make an adaptation for your own private use, not to be shared with other people, you can do what you like. If you decide to make them available (so publish them in print, or put them on the web) then, yes, you will undoubtedly have problems with the law if you don't seek and get permission for your project first.
Ivan the Dictator:
I am not intended here to steal and make money, should anything be related as copyright infringement.
Making money has little or nothing to do with the issue, although it might have a bearing later on in a legal case: the need to get permission first still is the important thing to keep in mind.
Ivan the Dictator:
what I came here for is how to receive permission on using the series of Tintin, and making and posting it to YouTube, as an own version of Tintin,
You could approach Moulinsart and ask them for permission, but it is almost certainly going to meet with a reply of "no".
Doing it without asking permission, is, again, putting yourself on the wrong side of copyright.
Ivan the Dictator:
But what is confusing is... Does a self worker has to do work that is strictly entirely by it's own?
I'm afraid I don't understand your point here, but hope it is covered by the information above and elsewhere on the site.
Ivan the Dictator:
how did Spielberg have rights to use an adaptation of Tintin?
Initially he asked Hergé before Hergé died (it was in the works from the 1980s). Unfortunately they never met, but coincidentally Hergé had already suggested that Spielberg was his choice to make a Tintin film, so there were no immediate objections.
Spielberg and his team came to a legal deal with Moulinsart, with a contract about how and what they could use and do, and presumably financial and other arrangements were made.
Ivan the Dictator:
These franchises made various adaptations, because I learned that that the owner sold the rights to various TV and movie directors and producers.
Yes, that is basically the way it works.
Ivan the Dictator:
let me know if getting permission to use the rights of Tintin from the respectful works of Hergé of deciding what books to use when some of them are acceptable or not acceptable.
Again I'm not 100% sure of what you are asking here, but you have to bear in mind that if it is creating completely new adventures is what you have in mind, you will be unlikely to get past the fact that Hergé asked that there be no new stories after his death, and his widow has maintained that position as her general policy.
But here the discussion has to stop, as all we can do is speculate: only you can decide what to do next.
However, if you want to produce your Tintin stories and make them available legally, you will have to approach Moulinsart first.