The World Wide Web (world Wide Web or www) turned 29 on Monday. To mark the anniversary, web inventor Sir Tim Berners-Lee wrote a letter calling for "strong standards that balance the interests of both companies and online citizens."
At his letter, Berners-Lee criticized tech giants like Twitter and Facebook for having too much control over Internet and suggested more settings.
"The web that many of us connected to years ago is not what new users have today," Berners-Lee said in a blog post.
"What was once a rich variety of blogs and websites has been squeezed under the heavy weight of some dominant platforms."
"This concentration of power creates a new set of gateways, allowing a handful of platforms to control which of the ideas and opinions are displayed and shared," he said.
Sir Tim Berners-Lee also called for an immediate closing of the digital divide. For example: you are more likely to be except connection if you are a woman, poor, or live in a rural area or a very low-income country.
“If you're offline today, you're locked out of every opportunity to learn and earn access to valuable services and participate in democratic debates. If we don't invest seriously in closing this gap, the last billion won't be connected until 2042. We'll be missing an entire generation.”
What Tim Berners-Lee said about the 28 years of the World Wide Web
In his 2017 letter, Sir Tim Berners-Lee warned against fake news or fake news on the World Wide Web and that people would lose control of their personal data.
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