World Wide Web inventor wants new ‘contract’ to make web safe

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LISBON, Nov 6, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – The inventor of the World Wide Web on
Monday called for a “contract” to make internet safe and accessible for
everyone as Europe’s largest tech event began in Lisbon amid a backlash over
its role in spreading “fake news”.

Some 70,000 people are expected to take part in the four-day Web Summit,
dubbed “the Davos for geeks”, including speakers from leading global tech
companies, politicians and start-ups hoping to attract attention from the
over 1,500 investors who are scheduled to attend.

Tech firms now find themselves on the defensive, with critics accusing them
of not doing enough to curb the spread of “fake news” which has helped
polarise election campaigns around the world and of maximising profits by
harvesting data on consumers’ browsing habits.

British computer scientist Tim Berners-Lee, who in 1989 invented the World
Wide Web as a way to exchange information, said the internet had deviated
from the goals its founders had envisaged.

“All kinds of things have things have gone wrong. We have fake news, we
have problems with privacy, we have people being profiled and manipulated,”
he said in an opening address.

Berners-Lee, 63, called on governments, companies and citizens to iron out
a “complete contract” for the web that will make the internet “safe and
accessible” for all by May 2019, the date by which 50 percent of the world
will be online for the first time.

– ‘Going through a funk’ –

He has just launched Inrupt, a start-up which is building an open source
platform called “Solid” which will decentralise the web and allow users to
choose where their data is kept, along with who can see and access it.

Solid intends to allow users to bypass tech giants such as Google and
Facebook. The two tech giants now have direct influence over nearly three
quarters of all internet traffic thanks to the vast amounts of apps and
services they own such as YouTube, WhatsApp and Instagram.

Employees of Google, Facebook and other tech giants have in recent months
gone public with their regrets, calling the products they helped build
harmful to society and overly addictive.

Tech giants are also under fire for having built up virtual monopolies in
their areas.

Amazon accounts for 93 percent of all e-book sales while Google swallows
up 92 percent of all European internet-search ad spending.

“I think technology is going through a funk… it’s a period of
reflection,” Web Summit founder and CEO Paddy Cosgrave told AFP.

“With every new technology you go through these cycles. The initial
excitement of the printed press was replaced in time by a great fear that it
was actually a bad thing. Over time it has actually worked out OK.”

– Violent voices magnified –

Among those scheduled to speak at the event is Christopher Wylie, a
whistleblower who earlier this year said users’ data from Facebook was used
by British political consultancy Cambridge Analytica to help elect US
President Donald Trump — a claim denied by the company.

Another tech veteran who has become critical of the sector, Twitter co-
founder Ev Williams, will on Thursday deliver the closing address.

He left Twitter in 2011 and went on to co-found online publishing platform
Medium, which is subscription based and unlike Twitter favours in-depth
writing about issues.

The problem with the current internet model is that negative content gets
more attention online, and thus gain more advertisers, according to Mitchell
Baker, the president of the Mozilla Foundation, a non-profit organisation
which promotes Internet innovation.

“Today everyone has a voice but the problem is… the loudest and often
most violent voices get magnified because the most negative, scariest things
attract our attention,” she told AFP in a recent interview.

The Web Summit was launched in Dublin in 2010 and moved to Lisbon six
years later. The Portuguese government estimates the event will generate 300
million euros ($347 million) for Lisbon in hotel and other revenues.