GENEVA —
<1> At the ripe old age of 30 and with half the globe using it,
the World Wide Web is facing growing pains with issues like
hate speech, privacy concerns and state-sponsored hacking,
its creator says, trumpeting a call to make it better for humanity.
Tim Berners-Lee on Tuesday joined a celebration of the Web and
reminisced about his invention at CERN,
the European Organization for Nuclear Research,
starting with a proposal published on March 12, 1989.
It opened the way to a technological revolution that has transformed
the way people buy goods, share ideas, get information and much more.
It’s also become a place where tech titans scoop up personal data,
rival governments spy and seek to scuttle elections,
and hate speech and vitriol have thrived — taking the Web
far from its roots as a space for progress-oriented minds to collaborate.
As of late 2018, half of the world was online, with the other half
often struggling to secure access.
Speaking at a “Web@30” conference at CERN,
Berners-Lee acknowledged that a sense among many
who are already on the Web has become:
“Whoops! The web is not the web we wanted in every respect.”
<2> His World Wide Web Foundation wants to enlist governments,
companies, and citizens to take a greater role in shaping the web
for good under principles laid out in its “Contract for the Web.”
Under the contract, governments are called upon to make sure
everyone can connect to the internet, to keep it available and
to respect privacy.
Companies are to make the internet affordable, respect privacy and
develop technology that will put people — and the “public good” — first.
Citizens are to create and to cooperate and respect “civil discourse,”
among other things.
“The Contract for the Web is about sitting down in working groups
with other people who signed up, and to say,
‘Ok, let’s work out what this really means,’” Berners-Lee said.
It was unclear, however, how such rules would be enforced.
Berners-Lee cautioned it was important to strike a balance
between oversight and freedom but difficult to agree what it should be.
<3> “Where is the balance between leaving the tech companies
to do the right thing and regulating them?
Where is the balance between freedom of speech and hate speech?”
he said.
The conference, which brought together Internet and tech experts,
also gave CERN the chance to showcase its reputation
as an open-source incubator of ideas.
Berners-Lee worked there in the late 1980s,
and had been determined to help bridge a communications and
documentation gap among different computer platforms.
As a young English software engineer at CERN,
Berners-Lee, who is now 63, came up with the idea for
hypertext transfer protocol — the “http” that adorns web addresses
— and other building blocks for the web.
The “http” system allowed text and small images to be
retrieved through a piece of software — the first browser —
which Berners-Lee released in 1990 and is considered
the start of the web.
In practice, the access to a browser on a home computer made
the internet easily accessible to consumers for the first time
<4> Speaking to reporters on Monday,
Berners-Lee recalled how his research helped his former boss
at CERN, Mike Sendall, who wanted a pretext to buy
a then-new Next computer by Steve Jobs’ Apple needed for
his research.
Berners-Lee said Sendall told him to
”‘pick a random program to develop on it ...
Why don’t you do that hypertext thing?’”
Berners-Lee has since become a sort of father figure for
the internet community, been knighted by Queen Elizabeth II and
named as one of the 100 most important people of the 20th century
by Time magazine.
While he now wants to get the debate going,
other panelists expressed concerns like the increasing concentration
of control of the internet by big corporate players,
and fretted about a possible splintering of cyberspace
among rival countries.
“The challenges come from the same things that
make it (the Web) wonderful, and that’s the difficulty,”
said conference panelist Zeynep Tufekci,
an associate professor at the University of North Carolina’s School
of Information and Library Science.
<5> “The openness is wonderful, the connectivity is wonderful,
the fact that it was created as a network for academics
who are kind of into trusting each other...” she said.
Now with the Web, “there’s an enormous amount of centralization
going on, with a few big players becoming gatekeepers.
Those few big players have built, basically, surveillance machines,”
she said. “It’s based on surveillance profiling us and then
targeting us for ads — which wasn’t the original idea at all.”