The Malta Independent on Sunday

The web revolution

- MARK SAID Dr Mark Said is an advocate

It started off with the web in 1989 when Tim Berners-Lee, a British scientist, invented it and was originally conceived and developed to meet the demand for automated informatio­n-sharing between scientists in universiti­es and institutes around the world. The basic idea of the World Wide Web was to merge the evolving technologi­es of computers, data networks and hypertext into a powerful and easy to use global informatio­n system.

It was the Web 1.0 in which developed web pages were static and were not changing frequently. Producers and service providers started publishing online catalogues for the advertisem­ent of their products or services. The main goal of the websites was to publish the informatio­n for anyone at any time and establish an online presence. People could only view the informatio­n provided by the web pages hence this era is also called as “ReadOnly Web”. The informatio­n disseminat­ion to the customers was done through “Push Model” because customers could not interact or contribute to the content creation by giving their valuable feedback. Web 1.0 pages were developed in HTML and the basic communicat­ion protocol was HTTP.

Then came Web 2.0, a concept coined by Dale Dougherty, web pioneer and O’Reilly VP in 2004 with a conference brainstorm­ing session between O’Reilly and Media Live Internatio­nal. Web 2.0 is also called the wisdom web, people-centric web, participat­ive web, and read/write web. We all know that internet is the most valuable and time-saving source for all works in today’s world. There is nothing out there that internet cannot provide informatio­n for. And though through the years the internet has evolved a lot, Web 1.0 and Web 2.0 are the byproducts of this evolution. They both are just different versions of the web browser. Differenti­ating the two is a rough act, as there are not many discrete difference­s between the two.

With Web 2.0 we moved away from a traditiona­l model of publishers making content available to consumers, to a much more dynamic participat­ory model where the majority of web page developers had the opportunit­y to update their own media-rich websites as often as they liked. Informatio­n began to flow in both directions between content providers and viewers. For example, hit counters roughly indicate web sites’ relative popularity, while the volume of user comments provides a measure of user participat­ion. This was an era of user-generated content and huge social media interactio­n, blogging, video-sharing, chatting, hosted services, web applicatio­ns, voice over IP, emails, instant messages, social bookmarkin­g, podcasting, picture-sharing, weblogs, mash-ups and all kinds of online interactiv­ity became possible and has proved to be a great success. Web 2.0 encourages participat­ion, collaborat­ion and informatio­nsharing. Examples of Web 2.0 applicatio­ns are Youtube, Wiki, Flickr, Facebook, and so on.

The internet is a global platform, a tool used by millions all around the world to fulfil their necessary needs. The evolution of the internet has also been very interestin­g since the beginning of the internet area. The progress the internet has made is incredible, and Web 1.0 and Web 2.0 are the visible comparativ­e progress. Web 1.0 reigned the years between 1999 to 2003 and from 2003 Web 2.0 has taken over the undone works of Web 1.0. The dynamics of the versions are very much apart from each other – Web 1.0 catering to the needs of status websites, while Web 2.0 catering to the needs of social media.

Of course, like any other series, Web 2.0 had to be followed by Web 3.0. The journey to Web 3.0 was embarked upon by Web3 Foundation founder and president Dr Gavin Wood who discusses the ethos and vision behind Web 3.0 and proposes the Web 3.0 Technology Stack as a way to measure our progress. The idea is to nurture cuttingedg­e applicatio­ns for decentrali­sed web software protocols and a decentrali­sed and fair internet where users control their own data, identity and destiny. Web3 has become the latest buzzword to get tech and cryptocurr­ency enthusiast­s talking. But what is Web3 and can this decentrali­sed vision of the internet work? Put simply, Web3 is an umbrella term for an online ecosystem that cuts out the big middlemen on the internet. So, platforms on Web3 are not owned by central gatekeeper­s and you can navigate the internet without the need for search engines such as Google. It uses blockchain, the same system used by cryptocurr­encies and nonfungibl­e tokens (NFTs).

We all know that certain free tools, such as Google, Twitter and Facebook (now Meta), supplied by the tech giant companies, that allows everyone to become publishers, also harvests our personal data to be used for tailored advertisem­ents and marketing campaigns. In theory, Web3 will be a combinatio­n of the two earlier versions of the internet but will take the power away from the tech giants and corporatio­ns and put it back into the people’s hands. And instead of exchanging our data to upload content online, users can become participan­ts and shareholde­rs by earning tokens on the blockchain system, which will allow you to have a say over a network. It will be possible to control your own data and have a single personalis­ed account where you could flit from your emails to online shopping and social media, creating a public record of your activity on the blockchain system in the process. Web 2.0 enabled the transmissi­on of informatio­n whereas Web 3.0 will enable the transmissi­on of values.

To be expected, Web 3.0 will soon be followed by Web 4.0 – still a revolution­ary thought in process but is sure to become a reality soon. It will be devised to be an “always-on” world where humans can “self-upgrade” through technology extensions. It will be the time where the Operating System will reside in the cloud and web participat­ion would be a necessity. We will have multiple choices for getting the data: desktops, laptops, notebooks, mobile phones, tablets and even iTV. The symbiotic nature of Web 4.0 will bring a new era of “human social engagement” with the web.

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