A typical web reference might look something like this:
Ross, Jim "Netscape and Mosaic" in GS390 Lab Workbook Spring 96, March 27, 1996Citations from the Internet obviously won't look exactly like this. The following suggestions were made in the February 1996 Internet World on page 25.
Smith, John "John's Page: Good Marketing Tactics" at http://www.stateu.edu/users/jsmith/,8 August 1996
Doe, Jane "Putting Data Online?" in comp.infosystems.www, 2 October 1996
Infocorp Inc., "Going Digital at gopher"://gopher.icorp.com:70/11/Papers/GoDig/, 15 July 1996The first example uses the page title followed by the heading for the cited piece. The Usenet post (second example) uses the subject of the post and it's date (not the date you saw it). The third example, a Gopher source, uses the URL, the internet address, not just the Gopher server. The goal is to provide enough information so that the reader could check out the information herself. For a more specific referencing styles check out the following:
Details APA style of referencing for electronic based data.
Details MLA style of referencing for electronic based data.