Orlando Sentinel

Web inventor offers a plan to govern internet

- By Frank Bajak

World Wide Web inventor Tim Berners-Lee has released an ambitious rule book for online governance — a bill of rights and obligation­s for the internet — designed to counteract the growing prevalence of such anti-democratic poisons as misinforma­tion, mass surveillan­ce and censorship.

The product of a year’s work by the World Wide Web Foundation where Berners-Lee is a founding director, the “Contract for the Web” seeks commitment­s from government­s and industry to make and keep knowledge freely available — a digital policy agenda true to the design vision of the 30-year-old web.

The contract is nonbinding, however. And funders and partners in the endeavor include Google and Facebook, whose data-collecting business models and sensation-rewarding algorithms have been blamed for exacerbati­ng online toxicity.

“We haven’t had a fairly complex, fairly complete plan of action for the web going forward,” Berners-Lee said in an interview. “This is the first time we’ve had a rule book in which responsibi­lity is being shared.”

For instance, the contract proposes a framework for protecting online privacy and personal data with clearly defined national laws that give individual­s greater control over the data collected about them. Independen­t, well-resourced regulators would offer the public effective means for redress. Current laws and institutio­ns don’t measure up to that standard.

Amnesty Internatio­nal just released a report charging that Google and Facebook’s business models are predicated on the abuse of human rights.

Berners-Lee neverthele­ss says that “having them in the room is really important.” He said both companies had approached the foundation seeking participat­ion.

“We feel that companies and government­s deserve equal seats at the table and understand­ing where they’re coming from is equally valuable,” he said. “To have this conversati­on around a table without the tech companies, it just wouldn’t have the clout and we wouldn’t have ended up with the insights.”

One of its biggest challenges is the growing Balkanizat­ion of the internet, with national government­s led by China, Russia and Iran exerting technical control over their domestic networks, tightening censorship and surveillan­ce.

“The trend for Balkanizat­ion is really worrying and it’s extreme at the moment in Iran,” said BernersLee.

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