Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web as decentralized, open, and democratic, but today, nearly 30 years later, itโ€™s far from what heโ€™d originally envisioned.
Kicking off the Techonomy 2018 conference on November 11 in Half Moon Bay, California, Berners-Lee sat in conversation with David Kirkpatrick, sharing his plan for how to โ€œresetโ€ the web and help users regain control from the corporate powers that have usurped it.
That plan is Solid, an open-source project that Berners-Lee and others have been working on at MIT to re-decentralize the Web. The platform keeps usersโ€™ data in pods, or personal online data stores, that are like private clouds. Each pod has its own API.
Itโ€™s Berners-Leeโ€™s hope that Solid, and his connected startup Inrupt, will bring what many have come to view as a dystopia back to the utopia it once was.
Today, according to Berners-Lee, about a third of the global population is connected to the web. โ€œIt turns from being a cool project to being a responsibility,โ€ said Berners-Lee. โ€œIf you use the web for 98 percent of your time, you should spend the other 2 just looking out for it, not taking it for granted, and looking out for the people who havenโ€™t got it yet.โ€
As Kirkpatrick put it: โ€œHe has served as a steward and guardian of his own invention,โ€ and, now more than ever, that activism is essential to battling the social inequities that have taken hold online.
Berners-Lee said that up until a couple of years ago, despite growing recognition that there is bad content on the web, it was the userโ€™s responsibility to seek out the good. Today, though, that philosophy is undergoing change.
โ€œSomebody would come to me and say, โ€˜Hey Tim, Iโ€™ve looked at your web and thereโ€™s some bad stuff on it. Thereโ€™s some fake stuff on it.โ€™ Yeah, well, donโ€™t read it,โ€ said Berners-Lee. โ€œThen [we] realized that the fact that thereโ€™s a bunch of junk out there, thereโ€™s a bunch of fake stuff out there, thereโ€™s nasty stuff out there, actually thereโ€™s a bunch of people who do read it.โ€
Part of getting everyone to โ€œdo better,โ€ said Berners-Lee, is following the World Wide Web Foundationโ€™s contract, which outlines goals for governments, companies, and people underscoring its core principles that the web was designed to bring people together and make knowledge freely available to everyone.
Another part of doing better is getting lawmakers to actually understand what it is that theyโ€™re governing.
โ€œYou tell kids, girls particularly, you tell all your girls to code, to get into tech, to get a computer and learn how to code โ€” not because we need you building the new user experience for another website, but because we need you in Parliament and in Congress,โ€ he said. โ€œWe need people in positionsโ€ฆwho understand what a computer can do.โ€
Watch Berners-Lee’s talk: