World Wide Web turns 35 today 12th March 2024

World Wide Web

The World Wide Web (WWW), the invention attributed to Tim Berners-Lee while working at CERN, was conceived on 12th March 1989. This makes the World Wide Web 35 years old today.

It is important to recognise that the Web and the Internet are two different entities; the Web is a service that functions via the Internet, a worldwide network of interconnected computer networks. Whereas the Internet is the system.

The first successful communication between a Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) client and server through the Internet took place in mid-November 1989.

The Web has since evolved significantly, with the release of the first web browser and server, and the development of HTML, CSS, and JavaScript, which have shaped the modern digital experience.

First website

The inaugural website was launched at CERN and became accessible on 20th December 1990. Tim Berners-Lee developed this site to disseminate information about the World Wide Web project. In August 1991, it was made available to the public. Today, it is still possible visit this site, offering an intriguing look into the web’s nascent stages.

The internet

The internet, as we know it today, began to evolve in the mid-20th century. This era, known as the Information Age, Digital Age, or Computer Age, is characterised by a transition from traditional industry to an economy driven by information technology. This shift commenced in the 1940s and 1950s. The invention of the transistor in 1947 and the optical amplifier in 1957 were pivotal developments that propelled the advent of the internet.

The term ‘internet’ commonly denotes the worldwide system of interconnected computer networks that utilize the Internet protocol suite (TCP/IP) to connect devices globally. It is an extensive network comprising private, public, academic, business, and government networks of local to global systems.

ARPANET

Since the ARPANET’s inception, which is the internet’s precursor, the internet has been in existence for over 50 years. The ARPANET was conceived in the late 1960s and became operational in 1969. The internet is approximately 55 years old.

Art illustration depicting users on the World Wide Web – 35 years old today, 12th March 2024

The ARPANET, also known as the Advanced Research Projects Agency Network, represented the first wide-area packet-switched network featuring distributed control and was among the earliest to adopt the TCP/IP protocol suite.

These innovations laid the groundwork for what would become the Internet. Initiated by the U.S. Department of Defence’s Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA), the primary goal of ARPANET was to connect computers at Pentagon-funded research institutions via telephone lines, facilitating resource sharing and communication across distant computers.

The project commenced in 1966, with the initial computers being connected in 1969. By 1971, the network was operational and underwent rapid expansion. ARPANET was instrumental in introducing several protocols pivotal in today’s Internet communication, including the Network Control Protocol (NCP) and subsequently, TCP/IP.

Following the advent of the wider Internet, which ARPANET played a crucial role in catalyzing, the network was officially decommissioned in 1990.

Happy Birthday WWW and thank you Tim-Burners-Lee (I think)

Let’s see how far artificial intelligence (AI) becomes embedded in the next generation of the World Wide Web and of further internet development. Will the big tech companies of today still be running the AI projects of tomorrow?

Some tech executives think AI is giving Big Tech ‘inordinate’ power!

The power of AI

Too much power for too few

Tech execs have expressed concern that the development of artificial intelligence (AI) is concentrated in the hands of too few companies, potentially giving them too much power. OpenAI’s ChatGPT marked the start of what many in the industry have called an AI arms race, as tech giants including Microsoft and Google have sought to develop and launch AI models.

A number of tech execs have said that they feel users have lost control of their data online and that it is being harnessed by technology giants to feed their profits.

The development of artificial intelligence (AI) is concentrated in the hands of too few companies, potentially giving them excessive control over the rapidly evolving technology.

OpenAI’s ChatGPT

An explosion of interest in AI was sparked by OpenAI’s ChatGPT late last year thanks to the novel way in which the chatbot can answer user prompts. Its popularity contributed to the start of what many in the tech industry have called an AI arms race, as tech giants including Microsoft and Google seek to develop and launch their own artificial intelligence models. These require huge amounts of computing power as they are trained on massive amounts of data.

Meredith Whittaker reportedly said of large tech companies and the current deployment of AI…

Right now, there are only a handful of companies with the resources needed to create these large-scale AI models and deploy them at scale. And we need to recognize that this is giving them inordinate power over our lives and institutions’, Meredith Whittaker, president of encrypted messaging app Signal, is reported to have said. ‘We should really be concerned about, again, a handful of corporations driven by profit and shareholder returns making such socially consequential decisions’.

Whittaker previously spent 13 years at Google but became disillusioned in 2017 when she found out the search giant was working on a controversial contract with the Department of Defence known as Project Maven. Whittaker grew concerned Google’s AI could potentially be used for drone warfare and helped organize a walkout at the company that involved thousands of employees.

‘AI, as we understand it today, is fundamentally a technology that is derivative of centralized corporate power and control’, Whittaker reportedly said. ‘It is built on the concentrated resources that accrued to a handful of large tech corporations, largely based in the U.S. and China via the surveillance advertising business model, which gave them powerful computational infrastructure and huge amounts of data; large markets from which to pull that data; and the ability to process and structure that data in ways useful for creating new technologies.’

In essence, BIG TECH has far too much power in AI technology.

Tim Berners-Lee

The inventor of the web, Tim Berners-Lee, has also raised concerns about the concentration of power among the tech giants. Jimmy Wales, the founder of Wikipedia, says it is the state of social media that is of particular concern right now. On AI, however, he feels that while the technology giants now are leading the way, there is space for disruption.

Big tech and social media giants are inflicting profound damage on our society, and he believes AI could make this worse.