Look for the copyright symbol © in the footer of the site’s main page. “Inc” or “LLC” might follow the publisher’s name if it’s a company. Sometimes the publisher will be the same or similar to the name of the website. For example, if you’re citing wikiHow, the publisher is wikiHow. If you’re citing an online article on the New York Times website, the publisher is New York Times. If you’re creating an MLA works cited page, you don’t have to list the publisher if the content is in a periodical (including journals, newspapers, and magazines), is self-published, or hosted by a third-party hosting platform (like YouTube or WordPress). [1] X Research source

You may also find more information about the organization on pages called Team, Staff, or Careers.

One easy whois lookup tool is https://who. is. Just type the domain name (including the . com, . org, or other domain suffix) into the field at the top of the page and click the blue magnifying glass to search. The business or organization that registered the domain name will appear in the “Registrant Contact Information” section next to “Name. " Some domain registrants choose to keep this information private. If you see something like “Contract Privacy Inc” or any other text that indicates the registrant is private, you won’t want to cite this name—it’s not the name of the publisher.

You can also use Google to find the publication date of a website if it’s not obvious in the article or post.