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Inventor of the world wide web has fears for the future

June 30, 2025

Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of theworld wide web, is not pleased with how his invention has taken shape. The world wide web turns 29 years old today. To mark the occasion, Berners-Lee penned an open letter,published byThe Guardian, in which he discusses his disappointment, fears, and hopes in regards to his creation.

In the letter, Berners-Lee discusses how a milestone is about to be reached: at some point this year, half of the world’s population will be online. While that sounds like a cause for celebration, Berners-Lee states that he’s concerned the web that the non-connected half of the world will eventually connect with will be a sorry state of affairs.

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The three biggest issues Berners-Lee has with how the web has taken shape is thedigital dividethat exists between the haves and have-nots, the centralization of information, and thelack of regulationupon the largest web portals. With these major problems in place, Berners-Lee fears that the web could be “weaponized” through false information, corporate interests, and the stifling of free expression.

When it comes to the digital divide, Berners-Lee does not mince words; the people who are not connected to the internet are overwhelmingly poor, live in rural or low-income areas, are female, or a combination of all three. With these three categories of people not represented on the web, it creates a discourse in which their voices are not heard. If the web truly is for everyone, how can it be a fair conversation if so many voices are left out of the discussion?

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Berners-Lee explains:

To the second point — the issue of the centralization of information — Berners-Lee states:

While he never calls out the likes ofGoogleorFacebookdirectly in regards to this opinion, it’s clear that those are the kinds of companies he’s referring to. If the world wide web truly belongs to us, the people, why is access to the web controlled by only a few giant corporations? What’s to stop those corporations from limiting our access to information that only benefits them and their ultra-rich shareholders? Or, even worse, what stops them from promoting or even creating false information and painting it as fact?

For those reasons, Berners-Lee thinks more regulation is the key to the web being open and useful to everyone. “The responsibility – and sometimes burden – of making these decisions falls on companies that have been built to maximize profit more than to maximize social good,” he says. “A legal or regulatory framework that accounts for social objectives may help ease those tensions.”

Berners-Lee does not use the words “net neutrality” in the letter, but he has gone on the recordseveral timesin the past that he supports net neutrality. But it appears he wants to take things even further, with not only government oversight of how internet services distribute information to the people, but also how internet companies should operate as a benefit to the people and not simply for profit.

But regulation doesn’t just come from governments; it also comes from us, the users. “Let’s assemble the brightest minds from business, technology, government, civil society, the arts, and academia to tackle the threats to the web’s future,” he continues. “At theWeb Foundation[a non-profit founded by Berners-Lee], we are ready to play our part in this mission and build the web we all want. Let’s work together to make it possible.”

You can read the open letterin full here.

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