Most websites give the current year as the copyright year, since that's when the page rendered.
Yes, websites should be copyrighted. The exact design, layout, and content of a website should be protected in order to prevent any lookalikes.
In general, websites give the current year as the copyright year, because that's when the page rendered on the user's computer.
It's the current year; it appears at the bottom of each page.
None. In fact since 1989 a copyright notice isn't even required for protection to exist.
Each song has its own copyright year.
Most sites give the current year as the copyright year, because that's when the page rendered on the user's computer. There may be a notification at the bottom of each page, on a "home" or "about" page, or nowhere at all: notification is not required for protection.
Yes, if the web design legally belongs to you. Add © copyright YEAR NAME OF COPYRIGHT HOLDER to the bottom of each page of the website. This will signal to honest people that the web design is copyrighted and may not be used elsewhere.
In the United States, a copyright notice 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.
Most websites give the copyright year as the current year, because that's when the page rendered. See at the bottom of this page, Copyright [current year] Answers Corporation.
Websites typically give the copyright year as the current year, because that's when the page rendered. On wiki.answers, the notification is at the bottom of each page.
Google gives the copyright date as the current year, because that's the date the page rendered.