The inventor of the World Wide Web has said that social media and fake news are helping lead to the downfall of the online space as we know it.
Speaking as part of the opening keynote at OpenText Enterprise World in Toronto, Sir Tim Berners-Lee described how he built the World Wide Web, and how he and his team could never have envisaged how it could have grown.
But he also raised concerns about how companies, governments and other institutions could maliciously use the Internet in order to drive humanity apart and create discord.
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[li]World Wide Web at 30: Sir Tim Berners-Lee calls for greater protection[/li][li]Best web hosting service for websites in 2019[/li][li]Looking back at more than 25 years of the World Wide Web[/li][/ul]
Not perfect
âThe Web isnât perfect,â Sir Tim Bernes-Lee said during his speech, âWe want people to use the web in a positive way.â
âBe creative, be constructive. Build communities that respect civil rights and dignity. Donât be nasty - itâs that simple.â
Berners-Lee took particular aim at the power of social media sites, referencing the recent Cambridge Analytica-Facebook scandal and how that particular social network could affect society as a whole.
Noting how âfake newsâ scams had helped polarise opinions across the world, making people click on obviously false stories out of curiosity, he bemoaned how the âunintended consequencesâ of growing social networks may have helped bring many of us closer together, but also driven us further apart.
âThe world is a certain amount more nasty and more divided thanks to a certain social network,â he said. âThese are the things we didnât think about back in 1969.â
Berners-Lee referenced TV smash hit Black Mirror as âa flag itselfâ for the negative effects technology is having on our everyday lives, stating that, âwe need to keep working until Black Mirror is not a thing - we need to build a âWhite Mirrorâ, helping to build something constructiveâŚthings like the personal power we felt when we were bloggers.â
âWhen youâre worried about all the things that could go wrong, itâs easy to focus on this - but letâs notâŚthe Internet started off utopian, but now it looks like itâs going a bit more dystopian.â
[IMG alt="Sn8ww3vnaHqi2Y4YxKdMoZ" width="690px" height="387px"]https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/Sn8ww3vnaHqi2Y4YxKdMoZ.jpg[/IMG]
(Image credit: Shutterstock.com)
Going forward, Berners-Lee urged Internet users to go out and fight for the future of the Internet, harking back to the days of political protest he saw when developing the Web.
âWe ask people to fight for the web,â he said, âbecause the governments and the industry will get together and try to get the policy and technology right.â
âBut every now and again they slip up, go in the wrong directionâŚat the end of the day, citizens are the only people that hold governments or people accountable.â
âThe web is bigger than you, and we must analyse it and make sure it behaves as it should.â
[ul]
[li]The best VPN services of 2019[/li][/ul]
Continue readingâŚ
Speaking as part of the opening keynote at OpenText Enterprise World in Toronto, Sir Tim Berners-Lee described how he built the World Wide Web, and how he and his team could never have envisaged how it could have grown.
But he also raised concerns about how companies, governments and other institutions could maliciously use the Internet in order to drive humanity apart and create discord.
[ul]
[li]World Wide Web at 30: Sir Tim Berners-Lee calls for greater protection[/li][li]Best web hosting service for websites in 2019[/li][li]Looking back at more than 25 years of the World Wide Web[/li][/ul]
Not perfect
âThe Web isnât perfect,â Sir Tim Bernes-Lee said during his speech, âWe want people to use the web in a positive way.â
âBe creative, be constructive. Build communities that respect civil rights and dignity. Donât be nasty - itâs that simple.â
Berners-Lee took particular aim at the power of social media sites, referencing the recent Cambridge Analytica-Facebook scandal and how that particular social network could affect society as a whole.
Noting how âfake newsâ scams had helped polarise opinions across the world, making people click on obviously false stories out of curiosity, he bemoaned how the âunintended consequencesâ of growing social networks may have helped bring many of us closer together, but also driven us further apart.
âThe world is a certain amount more nasty and more divided thanks to a certain social network,â he said. âThese are the things we didnât think about back in 1969.â
Berners-Lee referenced TV smash hit Black Mirror as âa flag itselfâ for the negative effects technology is having on our everyday lives, stating that, âwe need to keep working until Black Mirror is not a thing - we need to build a âWhite Mirrorâ, helping to build something constructiveâŚthings like the personal power we felt when we were bloggers.â
âWhen youâre worried about all the things that could go wrong, itâs easy to focus on this - but letâs notâŚthe Internet started off utopian, but now it looks like itâs going a bit more dystopian.â
[IMG alt="Sn8ww3vnaHqi2Y4YxKdMoZ" width="690px" height="387px"]https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/Sn8ww3vnaHqi2Y4YxKdMoZ.jpg[/IMG]
(Image credit: Shutterstock.com)
Going forward, Berners-Lee urged Internet users to go out and fight for the future of the Internet, harking back to the days of political protest he saw when developing the Web.
âWe ask people to fight for the web,â he said, âbecause the governments and the industry will get together and try to get the policy and technology right.â
âBut every now and again they slip up, go in the wrong directionâŚat the end of the day, citizens are the only people that hold governments or people accountable.â
âThe web is bigger than you, and we must analyse it and make sure it behaves as it should.â
[ul]
[li]The best VPN services of 2019[/li][/ul]
Continue readingâŚ