EDIT: I HAVE TO STOP NOW ... run out of time, have to get on a plane. THANK YOU all 10e9 for the questions and ... Do continue discuss here and with #web25 everywhere and webat25.org

On March 12, 1989 I submitted my proposal for the World Wide Web. 25 years later, I'm amazed to see the many great things it's achieved - transforming the way we talk, share and create. As we celebrate the Web's 25th birthday (see webat25.org), I want us all to think about its future and ask how we can help make it a truly open, secure and creative platform – available to everyone. The idea of an AMA is another great example of how the Web's helping to connect and empower people around the globe and I'm really excited to be answering your questions!

Proof it's me: http://imgur.com/o16DOPb

Remember to discuss the web you want using #web25

EDIT: I HAVE TO STOP NOW ... run out of time, have to get on a plane. THANK YOU all 10e9 for the questions and ... Do continue discuss here and with #web25 everywhere and webat25.org

Comments: 4329 • Responses: 30  • Date: 

totharescue2942 karma

What was one of the things you never thought the internet would be used for, but has actually become one of the main reasons people use the internet?

timbl4345 karma

Kittens.

Glitchless2791 karma

What web browser do you use?

timbl1301 karma

My default browser at the moment is Firefox. I also use Safari, Opera and Chrome each a reasonable amount. Firefox has the Tabulator plugin which does neat things with linked data. If I am running a latest version of that (I check it straight out of github) which can be unstable, I'll use one of the others for things which need to be stable. Joe Presbrey ported the plugin to Chrome too BTW

wobetmit2373 karma

[deleted]

timbl2789 karma

I think it is up to us. I'm not guessing, I'm hoping. Yes, I can imagine that all to easily. If ordinary web users are not sufficiently aware of threats and get involved and if necessary take to the streets like for SOPA and PIPA and ACTA. On balance? I am optimistic.

mart951232056 karma

Edward Snowden- Hero or Villain?

timbl3744 karma

Because he ✓ had no other alternative ✓ engaged as a journalist / with a journalist to be careful of how what was released, and ✓ provided an important net overall benefit to the world, I think he should be protected, and we should have ways of protecting people like him. Because we can try to design perfect systems of government, and they will never be perfect, and when they fail, then the whistleblower may be all that saves society.

FLYINGSPAGHETTEESHIR2047 karma

Tim, What other names did you consider other than the world wide web?

timbl2753 karma

Mine of Information, The Information Mine, The Mesh

None had quite the right ring. I liked WWW partly because I could start global variable names with a W and not have them clash with other peoples' (in a C world) ...in fact I used HT for them)

norgent163 karma

Tim Berners-Lee just left a parenthesis unclosed...

timbl315 karma

Guilty (well, unopened, actually. Here is an extra one to make up.

Xeon061472 karma

A lot of people think that your calls for an open web are a bit hypocritical considering your support for the HTML5 DRM spec. What would you tell them?

timbl2169 karma

I would suggest to them the DRM question is not that simplistic. People want to watch big movies. DRM is a pain in many ways, but if you have used Netflix or bought a DVD or a bluray, then DRM is part of your life. I agree DRM is a pain in many ways, and should only be used for very "high value" streams. I also would point out that Copyright, DMCA aand CFAA in the US are seriously broken, and need fixing separate from the DRM question. Actually I would get involved with a very long complicated discussion, as I have already with many people. Not sure we have space here. Other points include the the browsers have putt DRM in -- they have to to keep market share -- irrelevant of whether the HTML specs make the connection to the web more standard.

tacobell18961354 karma

How do you feel about the supposed dark side of the internet, such as the black markets? (Silk Road etc.)

timbl1761 karma

Complicated question. I am not a great expert on them. Simple answers include of course that illegal things are crimes on or off the web. But anonymity is tricky. We have a right to be anonymous as a whistle-blower or under an oppressive regime but not when we are bullying someone? How can we build technical/social/judicial systems for determining which right is more important in any given case? Relates to tor...

dipiddy1294 karma

Is it true that error 404 came to be as a result of there not being a room 404 in the office you were working at?

timbl2376 karma

No. Nonsense.

ILL_YELL_AT_YOU1231 karma

Did you ever think that the internet would get this big?

timbl3901 karma

Yes, I more or less had it nailed down when it comes to the growth curve. I didn't get it completely right --- 25 years ago I was predicting Id be asked to do an AMA on reddit next wek, but it turned out to be this week. Well, we all make mistakes.

(no of course not)

SatellyteHye984 karma

Do you ever look at the stuff on the web now and feel like Robert Oppenheimer?

timbl1460 karma

No, not really. The web is a -- primarily neutral -- tool for humanity. When you look at humanity you see the good and the bad, the wonderful and the awful. A powerful tool can be used for good or ill. Things which are really bad are illegal on the web as they are off it. On balance, communication is good think I think: much of the badness comes from misunderstanding.

blprnt_ocr946 karma

While the web has advanced a lot in the last 25 years, a lot of the user-facing machinery remains the same. My web browser, for example, is faster and has some different functionality, but it still feels very much like Netscape Navigator did in 1994.

Do you have any ideas about how interface for the web could change in a real, transformational way?

timbl859 karma

I think that is a really good question. I don't have the answer off the top of my head. Also think when your vision can be completely surrounded with pixels so small you can't see them, a very powerful interface -- how cna we use that -- and to be creative together, not just watch? Inter-creativity I called it early on. Still don't have it.

chadumb912 karma

what was your first computer?

timbl1940 karma

I got a M6800 evaluation kit in 1976, and built a bunch of 3U high cards, put them in a rack with a car battery in the bottom of the crate as UPS. All hand-soldered on veroboard, and programmed in hex. 7E XX XX was a long jump, and 20 XX a relative jump IIRC. The display was an old TV and some logic and a bunch of discarded calculator buttons lovingly relabeled with transfer letters. Those were the days....

tef862 karma

Have you learned to spell referrer yet ?

timbl1383 karma

No, my speling is still terible. Hopefully not to much or it will get into header field names without some review at this stage!

ertebolle767 karma

Something I've been wondering for a while: did the name "World Wide Web" have anything to do with the "WorldWeb" in Dan Simmons' 1989 novel "Hyperion"? (the timing is a funny coincidence if not)

timbl1061 karma

No, didn't read that

munki87745 karma

where do you think the web will end up in the next 25 years?

timbl1591 karma

It is up to us. It is an artificial creation, as are our laws, and our constitutions ... we can chose how they work. We can make new ones. Our choice.

Kknowsbest683 karma

Who was your role model as a kid?

timbl1171 karma

My parents, who met building the first computer commercialized in the UK - the Ferranti Mk 1, and some of the people they worked with, my math teacher Frank Grundy, chem teacher Daffy....

ltpaine44601 karma

'Math'? You're letting the side down, TBL.

timbl63 karma

s/math/maths/g

Oil-of-Vitriol595 karma

Did you ever post a picture of your cat?

timbl1146 karma

Dog: Yes, Cat: No.

eeeeiiinnn492 karma

Why does no one mention Robert Cailliau anymore when it comes to the www? Didn't both of you invent it?

timbl1383 karma

Robert didn't invent it. I invented it by myself, and coded it up on a NeXT, but Robert was the first convert to it, and a massive supporter. He got resources together at CERN, helped find students, gave talks. He also later wrote some code for a Mac browser called "Samba". He also put a lot of energy into persuading the CERN directorate that CERN should declare that it would not charge royalties for the WWW, which it did April 1993.

jron338 karma

Thanks for doing an AMA!

Given your work at the World Wide Web Consortium and support of Internet decentralization, what are your thoughts on the W3C Web Payments Community Group and their effort to standardize web payments using Bitcoin and other digital currencies(http://spectrum.ieee.org/computing/networks/whos-who-in-bitcoin-web-payments-wunderkind-manu-sporny)? What impact, if any, do you think digital currencies might have on how value is sent over the Internet?

timbl456 karma

I think that it is important to have lots of different ways getting money to creative people on the net. So if we can have micropayment user interfaces which make it easy for me to pay people for stuff they write, play, perform, etc, in small amounts, then I hope that could be a way allowing people to actually make a serious business out of it. Flattr I found an interesting move in that direction.

misanthrope__321 karma

What are your thoughts on the increased surveillance on internet based mediums like GCHQ's monitoring of all the Yahoo video chats. Do you personally think it should be controlled, non existent or fine the way it is now?

timbl533 karma

I think that some monitoring of the net by government agencies is going to be needed to fight crime. We need to invent a new system of checks and balances with unprecedented power to be able to investigate and hold the agencies which do it accountable to the public.

Zab18977244 karma

Do you still have an interest in trainspotting?

timbl536 karma

Still like trains, travel on them when I can and when in a country which has gotten its train act together.

IAMA_BUTTHOLE_AMA185 karma

I dont really have anything to ask, i'd just want to thank you.

Alright.. maybe one question. What site do visit on a daily basis?

timbl297 karma

w3.org Since the beginning W3C has worked in the web. "If it isn't on the web it doesn't exist" when it comes to discussing things in meetings etc.

jamesno26136 karma

Mr. Berners-Lee, the first picture on the WWW is a group of women from CERN at what appears to be a party. Is there a story behind them?

timbl65 karma

Actually it was a lot of cheek (which he has a lot of) for Silvano to suggest that was the first picture on the web. There is no evidence to that effect, apart from that he has got away with it so far. The original NeXT browser would allow you to link HTML files to all kinds of things, movies, images, sounds. (Cool machine, the NeXT) . So people may very early on have put all kinds of things up. I tended to use HTML with talks, with links to diagrams as (typically) postscript. Les Horribles Cernettes were a band where Silvano played and did AV, and the girls in question sang. Silvano is and was a very creative individual in many ways, music, movies, code. etc... and a great spirit (whether or not it really was the first photo!)

theirfReddit122 karma

Thank you very much for doing an AMA.

I can not thank you enough for what you have done in inventing the web and bettering it and making content and information accessible and usable for all!

I just wanted to say thank you. I devote my time to designing and developing interactions and experiences that a simple, intuitive, and delightful.

I don't know what I'd be doing if it wasn't for your work. I don't know where the world would be without your work.

Many, many thanks!

timbl234 karma

You are very welcome! Use it any time you like ... :-)

CalebGarling64 karma

An Internet Bill of Rights feels like a nice concept, but even with the right intentions, it also feels like it centralizes power. And the goal of the Web today is to decentralize power. Can you explain how the two might balance?

timbl127 karma

Funny - I don't see how a bill of rights (like the right to connect with whoever you want to) centralizes power. I think is lays the basis for steering laws, and governments are rather centralized things, but rights constrain governments for the benefit of individuals.

not_that_erin40 karma

How do you see Edward Snowden?

timbl85 karma

(see below)

ethnt38 karma

You talked recently about having a "Magna Carta" of sorts for the web. How do you envision that sort of system working?

timbl62 karma

Well, what do you think? Crowdsource a bill of rights at the very high level -- values level -- globally, non-nationally, in the first half of this year, and then in the second half of the year in each country make a list of the changes to the national system which will be necessary to implement it? That is plan A I think. See webwewant.org