Web Foundation marks 10th anniversary by launching ‘protect the web’ initiative

Web Log: Global plan aims to make internet affordable and accessible to everyone

Earlier this year the world wide web – invented by Sir Tim Berners-Lee – celebrated its 30th anniversary. This month the Web Foundation – also co-founded by Berners-Lee – celebrates its 10th anniversary. The Web Foundation is an independent international organisation advocating for an open web and access to the internet as a basic human right.

During the last decade it has carried out research including a 2015 report showing that women in low- to middle-income countries are 50 per cent less likely to access the internet than men. The foundation has also funded the A4AI Initiative which has helped to reduce the cost of internet for 650 million internet users in countries across Africa, Asia, and Latin America and the Caribbean.

Protect

On November 25th the foundation will launch the Contract for the Web – a global plan to protect the web as "a force for good". This initiative lists supporters including the Internet Freedom Foundation, the Open Data Institute, the Open Knowledge Foundation and hundreds from private industry including Microsoft, Google, Facebook and Twitter.

The contract outlines that companies will promise to: make the internet affordable and accessible to everyone so that no one is excluded from using and shaping the web; respect consumers’ privacy and personal data so people are in control of their lives online, and develop technologies that support the best in humanity and challenge the worst so the web really is a public good that puts people first.