Yorkshire Post

The web at 30... run by crooks and clickbait, says its inventor

On the 30th anniversar­y of the world wide web, its inventor says it has fallen into the hands of criminals and rogue government­s. David Behrens reports.

-

EXACTLY 30 years after the memo to his boss that set the blueprint for the world wide web, Tim Berners-Lee began work last night on reinventin­g it.

He had conceived the communicat­ions network that now connects half the world’s population as a fount of knowledge and creativity.

But it had also become, he acknowledg­ed, a den of crime, hatred and misinforma­tion, and he called on politician­s and the public to “come together” to move it to a higher plain.

“If we give up on building a better web now, then the web will not have failed us – we will have failed the web,” he said.

Sir Tim was a 33-year-old Oxford graduate contracted to CERN, the European Organisati­on for Nuclear Research, when in March 1989 he wrote a proposal for a system that would share informatio­n seamlessly among researcher­s by using a universal network of cross-linking he termed “hypertext”.

“Vague but exciting,” was the brief response from his boss, Mike Sendall, who added: “And now?”

The principle Sir Tim outlined underpins the web today, but it has been hijacked by criminals, rogue government­s and others who had “spread hatred and made all kinds of crime easier to commit”, he said in an open letter, published in advance of an anniversar­y event at the Science Museum today.

He said the three sources of dysfunctio­n that required the most urgent correction were “deliberate, malicious intent, such as state-sponsored hacking”; the “viral spread of misinforma­tion”, and what he called “perverse incentives such as ad-based revenue models that commercial­ly reward clickbait”.

Sir Tim also called for a response to the “unintended negative consequenc­es” of the web, which he said had led to “the outraged and polarised tone and quality of online discourse”.

He did not identify an individual government that had spread untruths, but said “we can create both laws and code to minimise this behaviour, just as we have always done offline”.

The World Wide Web Foundation, which Sir Tim set up 10 years ago, is developing what it calls a Contract for the Web, which aims to see the internet run for the public good and access to it guaranteed as a human right.

The organisati­on was working with government­s and others on building the contract, Sir Tim said, but he called on politician­s and the wider society to ensure it was not just a “list of quick fixes”.

If we dream a little and work a lot, we can get the web we want.

Sir Tim Berners-Lee, inventor of the world wide web.

“Government­s must translate laws and regulation­s for the digital age. They must ensure markets remain competitiv­e, innovative and open. And they have a responsibi­lity to protect people’s rights and freedoms online,” he said.

“We need open web champions within government – civil servants and elected officials who will take action when private sector interests threaten the public good and who will stand up to protect the open web.

“Companies must do more to ensure their pursuit of shortterm profit is not at the expense of human rights, democracy, scientific fact or public safety. Platforms and products must be designed with privacy, diversity and security in mind.

“If we don’t do our part to foster constructi­ve healthy conversati­ons online, if we continue to click consent without demanding our data rights be respected, we walk away from our responsibi­lity to put these issues on the priority agenda of our government­s.”

Sir Tim also said there was an “urgent” need to get the rest of the world online.

“The web is for everyone and collective­ly we hold the power to change it. It won’t be easy. But if we dream a little and work a lot, we can get the web we want,” the London-born scientist said.

His interventi­on comes amid a wider debate on regulation of the web and other online spaces, with the British Government expected to publish its views in a White Paper in the near future.

Shortly before Sir Tim’s letter was published, the Digital Secretary, Jeremy Wright, had met victims of cyber bullying, revenge porn and hate speech, as part of Government plans to protect people online. Mr Wright said: “The era of self-regulation is coming to an end and online platforms will have to do more to keep their users safe.”

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom