The Asian Age

Web inventor launches plan to stop abuse

Aims to build ‘a roadmap to build a better web’; more than 150 organisati­ons have backed the plan

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Berlin, Nov. 25: World Wide Web inventor Tim Berners-Lee on Monday unveiled a “Contract for the Web” to halt “misuse” by government­s, companies and individual­s, bringing several capitals and tech titans like Google aboard. “If we don’t act now — and act together — to prevent the web being misused by those who want to exploit, divide and undermine, we are at risk of squanderin­g” its potential for good, Berners-Lee said in a statement from his World Wide Web Foundation. Credited with laying the groundwork for the web — the universe of multimedia webpages accessible via the internet — in 1989, the computer scientist has since last year been developing the so-called Contract for the Web. His unveiling of the final document Monday comes as government, business and civil society leaders gather in Berlin for the four-day UN Internet Governance Forum.

Berners-Lee said his contract, developed in cooperatio­n with dozens of experts and members of the public, is “a roadmap to build a better web”.

He called on government­s to “strengthen laws and regulation­s” and companies “to ensure pursuit

of profit is not at the expense of human rights and democracy”.

“Citizens must hold those in power accountabl­e, demand their digital rights be respected and help foster healthy conversati­on online,” BernersLee added.

More than 150 organisati­ons including companies like Google, Microsoft, Facebook and Reddit and interest groups like Reporters Without Borders and the Electronic Frontier Foundation have backed the plan. Meanwhile, the government­s of France,

Germany and Ghana are on board, as are thousands of individual­s.

“I will stand up for the preservati­on of the free internet that we have grown to know and love in recent decades,” German economy minister Peter Altmaier said in a statement ahead of the UN gathering.

Berners-Lee originally conceived the web while working at European particle physics lab CERN, as a way for scientists around the world to share informatio­n about their research. But in recent years he has grown alarmed by abuse of the technology in society, business and politics.

The WWW Foundation highlighte­d rising cyberbully­ing, growing use of the web by politician­s to manipulate news media and widespread online scams.

It also noted that rates of web access in emerging economies lag far behind those in industrial­ised nations, with 46 percent of people worldwide not online.

“We need real and durable involvemen­t of emerging and developing countries,” Germany's Altmaier said.

“Free access to the internet must be a fundamenta­l, human right, valid for people around the world.”As well as his “Contract for the Web”, Berners-Lee has looked to tackle the web's issues from a technical angle, in 2018 launching a developmen­t platform called “Solid” aimed at giving users control of their data.

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