The CIA World FactBook has no copyright date. Because the Central Intelligence Agency is a government entity a majority of the information there is automatically in the public domain. Any material that is not public domain is clearly indicated and permission must be sought from the original source.
If the website does not post it, then look for any copyright date and use the latest (newest) date. For example, if the copyright says, 'website.com - Copyright 2002-2007', then the published date of the website is 2007.
The copyright date of each element of this website may be different according to when it was published and whether it was the work of an individual or of an employee of a company.
The official website whitehouse.gov is not protected by copyright, pursuant to federal law.
The year of the encyclopedia is the year of the copyright; there are far too many editions to answer this question directly.
The CIA World Factbook has up-to-date facts on Japan. The World Almanac also has facts on Japan.
It's the current year; it appears at the bottom of each page.
The website of > lawyershop < shows a copyright date of 2008 and the copyright date of their parent company website > einsteinlaw < indicates 1999. Whether these dates are the actual founding dates of the companies involved will have to be determined by your own further research.
In general, websites give the current year as the copyright year, because that's when the page rendered on the user's computer.
Not necessarily. The release date can be well after the copyright date.
In APA format, you list it as (n.d.) and give the date retrieved.
A corporate entity would not have a copyright date.
The copyright date of the original book is July 24th, 1954The copyright date of the movie is December 19th, 2001The copyright date of the video game is September 24th, 2002