IT Jobs

Online business Toolkit

Berners-Lee looks for Web's big leap


Reuters

Published: 22 May 2006 16:55 BST

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly

The World Wide Web is on the cusp of making its next big leap to become an open environment for collaboration, and its inventor said he has not been so optimistic in years.

Still, Tim Berners-Lee, the Briton who invented and then gave away the World Wide Web, warns that Internet crime and anti-competitive behaviour must be fought tooth and nail.

A lot of new technology is becoming available after many years to make the Web smarter and easier to use, he said.

"My personal view is that a lot of it is coming together now. That is very gratifying to see ... I'm very optimistic at this moment," Berners-Lee said in a telephone interview ahead of the annual World Wide Web conference, which opens in Edinburgh on Monday.

"The whole industrial environment is more exciting. We had the bubble and the burst, but now you see a low of young companies again. There's renewed enthusiasm among VCs (venture capitalists) to invest in start-ups. I get a feeling of upsurge in activity."

Roughly twice as much money is being invested in European Internet start-ups than the figure two years ago, according to venture capitalist community Tornado-Insider.

"Four years ago, the patent problems were getting in the way. A lot of us were worried, because it looked like the whole thing could get bogged down," Berners-Lee said, referring to attempts by private companies to patent software needed on Web sites and charge royalties for usage.

Thanks to the help of many, royalty-free licences are now available, said the man who never saw a cent of royalties for his invention, which set off an industry now generating hundreds of billions of euros (dollars) in revenues a year.

Realising a vision

Berners-Lee in 1990, while at the European Particle Physics Laboratory CERN in Geneva, designed key parts of the Web to let scientists work together when in different parts of the world.

Currently the director of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), which is a U.S.-headquartered forum of companies and organisations to improve the Web, he is only now realising his early vision of a two-way Web where people can easily work together on the same page and the content on a page can be recognised by computers.

Some early examples of Web sites that combine data from different sources include Google Maps, whose geographic maps turn up on other sites combined with services, and photo-sharing site Flickr, where members comment on each other's postings and developers can use the pictures to create new applications.

"Several years ago we said: 'What a shame that we can't go to that Web site and find all that stuff in there.' We had a loose roadmap five years ago. Steadily we've been making progress," said Berners-Lee, adding that most of the work had been done.

"Of course there are people who say: 'Why didn't Tim do that from the start?' But it's more complicated," he said.

Elements are already filtering through, such as Web sites that do not have to be refreshed entirely when only parts are being updated.

A new query language, SPARQL (pronounced "Sparkle"), is designed to make Web pages easier for machines to read, allowing all sorts of different data to be put to work on the Web.

"SPARQL will make a huge difference," Berners-Lee said.

"You can see so many ways the Web is taking off in so many different directions," he said.

Concerns

Berners-Lee is no fan, however, of fenced-off Web areas specially designed for mobile devices such as the new ".mobi" suffix. He wants Web sites and devices to be smart enough to figure out what the best way is to present information to consumers.

He is also concerned that some Internet providers in the United States have started to filter data, giving priority to premium data for which the operator receives an additional fee. They can do this, because they own the cables, the service, the portals and other key applications.

"The public will demand an open Internet," he said.

On his blog, at http://dig.csail.mit.edu/breadcrumbs/blog/4, Berners-Lee pays homage to the designers of the Internet who decided that all data packets were created equal. "I tried then to make the Web technology, in turn, a universal, neutral platform."

Another element of concern to Berners-Lee is "spam in general and particularly phishing", referring to criminals trying to fish for credit card details and other private data.

Web sites have to be much clearer in showing consumers that they are safe, he said.

"Now if a Web site exchanges a certificate, a little lock appears but it does not tell you that. A consumer is not aware of it and may be at a site that looks official but may not be his bank at all. What you need is a browser that knows what you're connecting to and tells you."

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly

Did you find this article useful?
87 out of 140 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

0 comments


Company/Topic Alerts

Create a new alert from the list below:




Sentry Posts Blog

Kaspersky to concentrate on whitelisti...

Antivirus company Kaspersky will concentrate on whitelisting in version 8.0 of its enterprise security software, according to David Em, senior technology consultant for Kaspersky. The... More

Post a comment

Microsoft Killing XP so that Vista Can...

It would appear from recent news reports that Microsoft is to ban oem selling of XP from January. While this makes good sense for Vista sales it hardly gives Microsoft any, much needed,... More

Post a comment

Council workers lose jobs over eBay 'a...

One council worker has been sacked, and two have lost their jobs over spending too much time on auction site eBay, reports the BBC. Apparently some of the the staff members at Neath... More

Post a comment

Featured Talkback

So those in favour of net neutrality say that "ISPs should ... not favour traffic from one online service or content supplier over another" Those against say "if service providers are not allowed to give some types of content priority over others, many users of the internet will end up experiencing a poor quality of service." Folks, these are two completely separate arguments.

By: Orinico

Read full story:
Why you should care about net neutrality

T-Mobile Logo
Loading Video Player ....

Discussions

1000030281 1000030281

Microsoft: You already have naked PCs!

Saturday 29 September 2007, 3:28 AM

5 comments
mlw007 mlw007

Microsoft: You already have naked PCs!

Friday 28 September 2007, 10:46 PM

5 comments
7harsha 7harsha

IP Address allocation

Friday 28 September 2007, 9:27 PM

1 post