Geneva – The inventor of the World Wide Web knows his revolutionary innovation is coming of age, and doesn’t always like what he sees: state-sponsored hacking, online harassment, hate speech and misinformation among the ills of its “digital adolescence.”
Tim Berners-Lee issued a cri-de-coeur letter and spoke to a few reporters Monday on the eve of the 30-year anniversary of his first paper with an outline of what would become the web — a first step toward transforming countless lives and the global economy.
The European Organization for Nuclear Research plans to host Berners-Lee and other web aficionados on Tuesday.
Berners-Lee said: “We’re celebrating, but we’re also very concerned.”
Late last year, a key threshold was crossed — roughly half the world has gotten online. Today some 2 billion websites exist.
As reported by Vos Iz Neias