Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web nearly 30 years ago. Now he wants to fix it.

Berners-Lee on Monday revealed a new campaign called "Contract for the Web" at the Web Summit tech conference in Lisbon, Portugal. The campaign promotes principles
for governments, companies and citizens to improve the internet and fight back against hate speech, privacy concerns and political manipulation.
"Those of us who are online are seeing our rights and freedoms threatened," he said in a statement announcing the project, which was organized by his nonprofit the World Wide Web Foundation. Berners-Lee added that the contract outlines "clear and tough responsibilities" for those with the power to make the internet a better place.
More than 50 companies and organizations, including Facebook (FB), Google (GOOGL) and the French government have signed the contract, which will be published in full in May 2019.
So far, the contract includes nine principles. It asks that
governments ensure all citizens can connect to the internet, that
companies respect consumers' privacy and personal data and that citizens
create "rich and relevant content for everyone."
Giving people control over their
own data will benefit everyone, Berners-Lee told CNN Business' Senior
Tech Correspondent Laurie Segall in Lisbon.
"A lot of companies are finding it
so exciting to be able to switch from trying to exploit you, trying to
make you buy something you didn't want to buy, to actually switch back
to the core business model of helping the user [and] generating value
for the user," he said.
- CNN Business
No comments:
Post a Comment