The World Wide Web is 30 years old, and it's less free than ever

Alfonso Maruccia

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Forward-looking: The original World Wide Web software platform was developed by computer scientist Tim Berners-Lee while he was working at CERN. The novel information system was designed to promote faster and easier information sharing within the scientific community. It turned into an everyday commodity and entertainment routine for billions of people worldwide.

On April 30, 2023, the public version of the World Wide Web turned exactly 30 years old. In 1993, CERN (European Organization for Nuclear Research) decided to release the "W3 software" into the public domain (PD), a seemingly simple decision that ignited one of the most fundamental technology revolutions in modern times. Though the landscape has changed significantly, the web continues to be the primary daily resource for over 5 billion people – two-thirds of the global population – who rely on the internet for research, industry, communication, and entertainment.

Also see: The World Wide Web Turns 30: A Timeline

The W3 platform was first proposed by Tim Berners-Lee in 1989 as an information management system based on connections between existing pieces of information. The "hypertext system" was created on a NeXT machine in 1990, and within just a few years, it had won over numerous scientific and educational organizations beyond CERN. Of course, the main reason behind W3's early success was the fact that the Geneva-based institution decided to provide the software for free.

CERN has released the internal document that marked the PD status of the World Wide Web in 1993. Signed by Director of Research Walter Hoogland and Director of Administration Helmut Weber, it briefly described the W3 project as a "global computer-networked information system" offering a collaborative information system independent of hardware, software platform, or even physical location.

Access to information through W3 is provided "via a hypertext model," the document continues, on a worldwide network that is designed to work regardless of the information format and the client's operating system. The PD software release included a "basic" W3 client, a server, and a library of common code, for which CERN relinquished all intellectual property rights for both source and binary code.

In 1993, proper copyright licensing standards were still in their developmental phase. A year later, CERN adopted an open-source license for the next version of the software. This approach allowed the organization to retain copyright while enabling anyone to use and modify the W3 platform as they wished. However, the initial PD release has arguably allowed the web to "grow into the giant it is today," according to CERN.

Walter Hoogland now says that "the public release was the best thing" CERN could have done with the W3 project, a move that reflected CERN's core values of "open collaboration for the benefit of society."

That open collaboration and information-sharing principle of the original W3 platform is still alive today, even though the web is increasingly being transformed into siloed, proprietary platforms where information is collected, sold, or even weaponized for the benefit of Big Tech corporations or powerful, socially controversial individuals like Elon Musk. ChatGPT, the generative AI that leveraged the free web to create one of the most hyped technology products in recent times, is just the latest iteration of this troubling phenomenon.

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The internet was invented by the military, they had no concept of what it was they could really do with it.

Along comes some smart people with some smart ideas. But pretty sure it was used to share boobies.

Capitalism, and being able to connect to A holes from other countries 24/7, and 24/7 businesses, ruined the entire planet. But the one percent have all your data, complete control, and know, I am a fat F*!$er.

Now AI. I think in the Marvel series they called it "Endgame".

del "c:\world" *.*
 
What I hate about the modern web are the cookies that every page wants you to accept. I don't mind functional cookies but, these days, every page wants to know your identity, your location and your spending habits. If you want to turn them off then you have to fill out legal forms that that few can understand. I just wish google had a way of sending feedback on sites so you never have them appear in searches again.
 
The problem with the modern internet is 2-fold, the way I see it.

first and most obvious is how search results is based on selling you things. straight up webshops results, blog results that "review" products with affiliate links - amazing how they manage to never review a product and find it bad. and then recent years machine-generated links on weird domain names have begun showing up, with affiliate links also.

the second problem and probably the biggest, is how information is accessible on the internet. you go back some years and the internet was Chuck full of amateur websites, blogs, and forums with people discussing quite litterally everything.

these websites was open to everyone, including search engine data crawlers. which means that you could search for almost anything and end up with some useful result. that was what was great with the internet.

the shift we have today is those amateurs with amazing knowledge are now on Facebook and other websites that are closed down. the information is not accessible by search engine crawlers and maybe not even accessible to you (I.e. no Facebook account). now you are more likely to get search results bugus websites with half-assed information that is helpful but also not helpful.

we are truly getting dumber but we also can't help it. you can no longer search your way to knowledge like before.
 
The internet was invented by the military, they had no concept of what it was they could really do with it.

Along comes some smart people with some smart ideas. But pretty sure it was used to share boobies.

Capitalism, and being able to connect to A holes from other countries 24/7, and 24/7 businesses, ruined the entire planet. But the one percent have all your data, complete control, and know, I am a fat F*!$er.

Now AI. I think in the Marvel series they called it "Endgame".

del "c:\world" *.*
As related to THIS article, no... The military did not 'invent' the html language. That was all Dr. Tim Berners-lee. The TCPIP model, which was based on DARPA fundedefforts, could have been partly developed by the military, but wasn't entirely. As a matter of fact, the military was not keen on that particular DARPA project mostly because of its open aspect..
 
Just like TV, which could've been the greatest learning tool in mankinds history...Commercial interests have turned it into the ****-show of today. Ditto the Internet.
I agree with you except for the cause. Commercial interests are just a mean, it's all about control. Money is on a second plan for those who want us indoctrinated.
 
The internet was invented by the military, they had no concept of what it was they could really do with it.

Along comes some smart people with some smart ideas. But pretty sure it was used to share boobies.

Capitalism, and being able to connect to A holes from other countries 24/7, and 24/7 businesses, ruined the entire planet. But the one percent have all your data, complete control, and know, I am a fat F*!$er.

Now AI. I think in the Marvel series they called it "Endgame".

del "c:\world" *.*
Internet and the World Wide Web are different things, but closely related ones
 
There's no money in providing things for free.
While I agree with your statement, I think this article is more about the Internet being "free" not being zero cost. Free for you to go and consume whatever content you want without having to give up every scrap of your personal information or being manipulated in some way. Free from government censorship or influence. Some content will cost money because it has that value. Some will be given away at no cost because some people just want to share.

You would have to be crazy to expect every aspect of the Internet to be no cost. That simply cannot happen.
 
Of course this had to be about Twitter, Instagram and Facebook a.k.a coke, meth and heroin.
 
Until you realise that ALL money is created out of thin air....as debt.
Let me guess, after you realise that about the non-existing money you will also realise that reality is not what you think and start asking yourself why you are here, where is here and what is the purpose of life? There is one mathematical certainty: the consumption of hard drugs and other hallucinogenic substances has increased directly proportional with the increase in the usage of smartphones and social networks.
 
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