A copyright notice is designed to tell you that a work is protected by copyright, who is the holder of those rights and when that protection began.
In the United States, a copyright notice usually consists of three elements::
1. the © symbol (in some cases (c) is substituted), the word "Copyright" or abbreviation "Copr.";
2. the first year of publication; and
3. the owner of the copyright, either by name, abbreviation, or other designation.
Information--that is, straight facts--may not be protected by copyright; the expression of the information is.
Each book has its own copyright information.
All the copyright & trademark information for WikiAnswers can be viewed at the related link below
Each program has its own copyright information.
The reverse of the title page should have all of the copyright information.
Each issue or edition has its own copyright information.
Contact information for the US Copyright Office is at the link below.
Information itself is not subject to copyright. Only a creative work of authorship is protected by copyright.
The copyright page indicates the rightsholder, publication information, and cataloging information from the national library of the country of publication.
Malaysia's copyright law is Act 332, the Copyright Law of 1987. More information can be found at the link below.
The copyright page of a book gives much more information than just the copyright. It includes the cataloging data from the country of origin, edition information, and often even the typeface and paper quality.
Virginia Morrison has written: 'Commercial information services & copyright' -- subject(s): Information storage and retrieval systems, Copyright