×
GreekEnglish

×
  • Politics
  • Diaspora
  • World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Cooking
Tuesday
03
Mar 2026
weather symbol
Athens 12°C
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Economy
  • World
  • Diaspora
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Mediterranean Cooking
  • Weather
Contact follow Protothema:
Powered by Cloudevo
> technology

The father of the world wide web is one disappointed dad

Such companies are ill-equipped to work for social benefit given their focus on profit & perhaps could use some regulation

Newsroom March 13 10:27

Today is the World Wide Web’s 29th birthday, and to celebrate the occasion, its creator has told us how bad it’s become. In an open letter appearing in The Guardian, Tim Berners-Lee painted a bleak picture of the current internet — one dominated by a handful of colossal platforms that have constricted innovation and obliterated the rich, lopsided archipelago of blogs and small sites that came before. It’s not too late to change, Lee wrote, but to do so, we need a dream team of business, tech, government, civil workers, academics and artists to cooperate in building “the web we all want.”

Lee reserves his biggest criticisms for the huge platforms — by implication, Facebook and Google, among others — that have come to dominate their spheres and effectively become gatekeepers. They “control which ideas and opinions are seen and shared,” Lee wrote, pointing out that they’re able to impede competition by creating barriers. “They acquire startup challengers, buy up new innovations and hire the industry’s top talent. Add to this the competitive advantage that their user data gives them and we can expect the next 20 years to be far less innovative than the last.”

Centralizing the web like this has led to serious problems, like when an Amazon Web Services outage took down a chunk of internet services over a week ago — nearly a year to the day after another similar web-crippling incident on AWS. But bottlenecking the internet through a handful of platforms has also enabled something more sinister: The weaponization of the internet. From trending conspiracy theories all the way up to influencing American politics using hundreds of fake social media accounts, outside actors have been able to maximize their manipulation efforts thanks to a far more centralized internet than we used to have, in Lee’s opinion.

These companies are ill-equipped to work for social benefit given their focus on profit — and perhaps could use some regulation. “The responsibility – and sometimes burden – of making these decisions falls on companies that have been built to maximise profit more than to maximise social good. A legal or regulatory framework that accounts for social objectives may help ease those tensions,” wrote Lee.

>Related articles

The next step in Artificial Intelligence: Can an AI model be conscious, “feel,” “live”? Even experts admit they don’t know

“One step from disaster”: the hard-hitting NASA report on the adventure of astronauts Wilmore and Williams

UK government plan to wipe court records on grooming gangs sparks outrage over “justice blackout”

You know who could fix the future of the internet? Us, of course — a group of individuals from a broad cross-section of society who can outthink the hegemony of colossal internet corporations who are mostly fine with things as they are. Incentives could be the key to motivating new solutions, Lee concluded.

But there’s another problem that business can’t really solve: Closing the digital gap by getting the unconnected onto the internet. These are more likely to be female, poor, geographically remote and/or living outside of the first world. Bringing them into the fold will diversify voices on the internet and be, well, a moral thing to do now that the UN has decided internet access is a basic human right. But it’ll take more than inventive business models to get them online and up to speed: We’ll have to support policies that bring the internet to them over community networks and/or public access.

Source: yahoo

Ask me anything

Explore related questions

#democracy#internet#Public#science#technology#Tim Berners-Lee#world wide web
> More technology

Follow en.protothema.gr on Google News and be the first to know all the news

See all the latest News from Greece and the World, the moment they happen, at en.protothema.gr

> Latest Stories

The film “Peaky Blinders” starring Cillian Murphy premiered in Birmingham

March 3, 2026

Fotini Tomai to Dimitris Danikas: “Stalin laughed, the Greek Civil War is nonsense, he said”

March 3, 2026

Mourning at funerals of schoolgirls killed in Israeli airstrike in Iran – See video

March 3, 2026

Mitsotakis briefs Androulakis on Middle East developments: The preceding dialogue (updated)

March 3, 2026

Praise from Britons for Greece’s support to Cyprus as it bolsters regional security amid questions over UK response

March 3, 2026

Ghost Pitùr: Who is the “Phantom” who erases graffiti from walls at night

March 3, 2026

Gold climbs to $5,380 as investors boost demand for “safe havens”

March 3, 2026

Greece turned into Hollywood: 1980s Hydra rebuilt from scratch for Brad Pitt

March 3, 2026
All News

> Politics

Mitsotakis briefs Androulakis on Middle East developments: The preceding dialogue (updated)

Greek leadership coordinates amid rising Middle East tensions, prioritizing citizen safety and repatriation efforts

March 3, 2026

Patriot transferred to Karpathos: Dendias and F-16s in Cyprus, Frigates Kimon and Psara underway

March 3, 2026

The four Greek F-16 fighter jets sent by Athens have landed in Cyprus (video)

March 2, 2026

Keir Starmer: British bases in Cyprus are not used by American bombers

March 2, 2026

Iranian general directly threatens Cyprus: “We will launch as many missiles as necessary to force the Americans to leave”

March 2, 2026
Homepage
PERSONAL DATA PROTECTION POLICY COOKIES POLICY TERM OF USE
Powered by Cloudevo
Copyright © 2026 Πρώτο Θέμα