Tim Berners-Lee — "The web is a powerful weapon. We need to make sure it's used for good."
The web is a powerful weapon. We need to make sure it's used for good.
The web is a powerful weapon. We need to make sure it's used for good.
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"I was really annoyed when I found out people were using the web to look at pornography."
"The web is a mirror of us. We have to make sure it reflects our best qualities."
"The web is a public resource, and it needs to be protected."
"I’m not happy with the way the web has become a battleground for misinformation."
"If you put everything on the web, then the world will be a better place. You will be a better person."
British computer scientist who invented the World Wide Web at CERN in 1989 and founded the W3C, championing open web standards. Closely associated with Vint Cerf (TCP/IP co-creator and 'father of the internet') and Marc Andreessen (Mosaic browser creator and Netscape co-founder). For an intellectual contrast, see Mark Zuckerberg, Facebook (Meta) founder — Zuckerberg's walled-garden Facebook is the canonical contemporary opposite of Berners-Lee's open-web vision; Berners-Lee's Solid project and 'recapture the web' essays are explicitly written as a rebuttal to the platform-monopoly model Facebook pioneered.
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The internet holds extraordinary power to spread ideas, organize movements, and shape how billions of people think and act. That same power makes it dangerous — misinformation travels as fast as truth, and bad actors exploit its openness. Deliberate stewardship is required: the web's impact is never neutral, and everyone — engineers, policymakers, users — shares responsibility for steering it toward benefit rather than harm.
Berners-Lee invented the Web in 1989 at CERN and deliberately gave it away royalty-free, refusing to patent it. He founded the World Wide Web Consortium to maintain open standards and launched the Contract for the Web in 2019 to defend digital rights globally. His decades of advocacy for net neutrality and against surveillance capitalism reflect a creator who understands the web's dual-use potential better than anyone alive.
Berners-Lee issued this warning most forcefully in the 2010s and 2020s, as Facebook's Cambridge Analytica scandal exposed mass political manipulation, Russian operatives weaponized social media in elections, COVID-19 spawned deadly misinformation waves, and authoritarian governments deployed the web for mass surveillance and censorship. The same infrastructure that fueled the Arab Spring simultaneously enabled ISIS recruitment and coordinated disinformation — making governance of the web an urgent geopolitical issue.
AI-generated insights based on extensive research and information for context. Factual errors? Email [email protected].
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