Updated:
Oct 20, 2017 10:55 AM ET | Originally published: Oct 18, 2017
The
web, or "world wide web" as we used to say, turns 27 years old on
December 20. On that date, nearly three decades ago, British engineer and
scientist Tim Berners-Lee launched the world's first website, running on a NeXT
computer at CERN (the European Organization for Nuclear
Research) in Switzerland.
The website wasn't much at the time, just a few sentences
organized into topic areas that laid out the arguments for the concept. But it
established vital first principles still essential to the web as it exists
today: the notion of hyperlinks that reimagined documents (and eventually any
form of media) as nonlinear texts, and the ability for anyone, anywhere in the
world, to peruse that content by way of a browser: a piece of software that
cohered to universal formatting standards.
It's been a wild ride since. In the mid-1990s VRML (or as it was
then known, Virtual Reality Markup Language) seemed on the verge of
transforming the web. Adobe's Shockwave and Flash media players were at one
point multimedia stars in the ascendant. Who could have known in those early
days, that by 2017, a landscape once loomed over by companies like Microsoft (Internet Explorer) and
Netscape (Navigator) would fractionalize and give way to totally new players
like Google (Chrome)?
Here's TIME's collection of the 15 websites that most influenced
the medium, and why.
15.
Match.com
Emerging generations may someday look back at
the late 20th and early 21st centuries as a kind of dividing line: before and
after the Internet, and before and after we scrutinized potential dates with a
service like Match.com. The latter's been around since 1995, an online dating
service whose inception in 1993 was originally to distribute online classified
ads for newspapers. But that quickly shifted to helping people make screened
and interests-matched interpersonal connections, culminating in a service that
today operates in 25 countries and boasts tens of millions of members.
14. Reddit
Online forums have been around since the
Internet's inception, so in that sense, Reddit's just the modern face of what
began as dial-up discussion boards. But Reddit, which arrived in 2005, also
folds in social news curation, making it a combination story-and-reaction hub.
That notion of melding interesting, obscure or hot button topics with fan communities
has proven so popular that it's lured hundreds of millions of users who
generate tens of billions of page views annually, giving rise to a site slogan
that plausibly reads "The front page of the internet."
13. Pandora
Early Internet sites like MP3.com kicked off a
music-sharing wave that's culminated in digital platforms like iTunes and
Spotify, but Pandora exemplifies the notion of online streamed tunes with
recommendations delivered to taste. Launched in 2000, Pandora let users play
songs they knew or from genre categories in a browser, then followed with
suggested songs based on shared traits. Users could give each selection a
thumbs up or down, "training" the service to cater to their
preferences. You can see elements of that process in everything from Amazon's
"New For You" product recommendations, to Apple's "For You"
iTunes content curation tab.
12.
WikiLeaks
A site once contrasted with The Pentagon Papers for
its subversive "document dumps" of classified information has in the
wake of the 2016 election become a battleground for debate about the role of
mass scale whistleblowing and propaganda. Established in 2006 by Australian
activist Julian Assange as a means to anonymously divulge sensitive information
about countries and institutions, Wikileaks was best known for its revelations
about U.S. military operations, diplomatic activities, detention camps and
abetting of NSA leaker Edward Snowden — until 2016, when the site involved
itself in the U.S. presidential election by releasing troves of Democratic
party emails allegedly supplied by Russian operatives.
11. The
Pirate Bay
Open platforms invite controversy by their
nature, giving voice to groups who want to challenge cultural or legal
principles. Sites like Napster kickstarted illicit music-sharing in the early
2000s, but The Pirate Bay, launched by a trio of Swedes in 2003, exemplifies
the anti-copyright argument that "information wants to be free." The
site indexes content hosted by others, providing links that its users can use
to download movies, music, books and more — often in flagrant violation of
information-sharing laws. Though hounded across the globe by lawsuits, domain
seizures and criminal investigations, the site somehow persists and remains a
flashpoint for debate over the virtues and perils of peer-to-peer file sharing.
10.
Info.cern.ch
Created by "father of the web" Tim
Berners-Lee in 1989 at the CERN research center in Switzerland, info.cern.ch
isn’t much to look at today. But the archetype for anything is influential by
default, and that’s certainly true of this, the spark for every website that
followed. Still viewable today, the site spotlights features in the DNA of
every modern website, including hyperlinks, a site map, an About-style page and
contact information. We've made order of magnitude changes to the audiovisual
aspects of web design since, but Berners-Lee’s basic thoughts on what a website
should be still resonate nearly 30 years later.
9. eBay
Amazon may run the world's biggest online
store today, but credit eBay for popularizing the idea of an open
marketplace for buyers and sellers. eBay, which began life in 1995 as
AuctionWeb, forever altered the way the world passed along and monetized used
goods. And it paved the way for modern e-tailers like Etsy, which lets anyone
sell their crafts or run a small business online. Amazon may be where we turn
for paper towels, groceries and last minute holiday gifts, but it's still eBay
people scan to find vintage or scarce items, from rare pairs of sneakers to
sold out iPhones.
8. Drudge
Report
Matt Drudge’s eponymous "Report" is
most famous for breaking the Monica Lewinsky story, but the site rarely posts
news of its own. Instead, it serves as a conservative-leaning news aggregator,
pointing to articles from across the web and putting an ideologically-spun (and
irresistibly clicky) headline on them. Drudge’s barebones web design has
changed little over the years, serving as a sort of living memorial to the days
of dial-up Internet. But the site remains massively influential (and massively
read) in Washington, D.C., influencing the agenda of Beltway movers and
shakers.
7. Yahoo
Years before “Google” became a verb, there was Yahoo.
An early effort to bring order to the chaos of the Internet, Yahoo served as a
sort of Yellow Pages for the web, with human editors selecting links to news
stories and other sites. Google’s relevance-based search algorithms eventually
resonated more strongly with users, plunging Yahoo toward irrelevance as its
raison d'être dwindled. But Yahoo’s core idea — that something should help
Internet users cut through all the noise to find a bit of signal — remains an
essential tenet of online information curation.
6.
Craigslist
Long before finding a date by swiping your
smartphone, browsing apartments on Trulia, or searching for part-time work
through Indeed, there was Craigslist. The site remains a popular destination
for real estate and job listings in 2017, with more than 60 million monthly U.S. users.
Craigslist started as an emailed list of San Francisco-based events in 1995,
which founder Craig Newmark expanded into a classified ads site and online
forum. Its influences extend beyond the web, too: many attribute a significant
part of the newspaper industry's decline to the shift from print ads to online
ones.
5.
YouTube
In retrospect, watching videos on the Internet
seems obvious — monitors are basically tiny flatscreen TVs, after all. But it
took YouTube to show the world that anyone could be a video star. Just as early
blogging platforms made everyone a critic, YouTube (followed by Instagram and
Snapchat) turned anyone with a smartphone into a video publisher. The impact
has been immeasurable, both for better and worse: YouTube makes it easy to entertain
ourselves, learn new skills or keep in touch with far-flung friends. But it can
also be a haven for invective and hate speech, a problem the Alphabet-owned
site continues to grapple with.
4. Facebook
A website founded by CEO Mark Zuckerberg in
the early 2000s as a way to profile Harvard classmates has become the world's
largest social network. More than two billion users frequent the platform monthly,
eclipsing alternate platforms like Tencent's WeChat (968 million), Instagram
(700 million) and Twitter (328 million). But the site has also evolved from a
way to stay in touch with friends and relatives, to a medium through which both news and propaganda flow freely, mingling
in ways that often make it difficult to tell one from the other. Facebook has pledged to do battle with
so-called "fake news," and says it's refining the site's processes to
mitigate the spread of misinformation as well as clickbait.
3. Wikipedia
While your high school teachers and college
professors may have taught you to doubt Wikipedia's reliability, its rise to
prominence since launching in 2001 is undeniable. With five million English
entries, Wikipedia has become the de facto Internet encyclopedia. That said,
Wikipedia's openness — arguably what's fueled its omnipresence — is also its
biggest handicap. Since Wikipedia articles can be edited by anyone with
Internet access, the platform is susceptible to bias or outright inaccuracy.
But that hasn't hindered its popularity: according to Amazon's analytics site
Alexa, it's the fifth most trafficked website globally.
2. Amazon
Amazon in 2017 is a retail and technology
behemoth, selling everything from salad dressing to server space. But it began
as a humble online bookseller, paving the way for all the e-commerce sites that
followed. The company may not have pioneered concepts like browsing a digital
“store” or filling up an online “shopping cart,” but the site helped e-tail
break into the mainstream, and at a time when many consumers weren’t
comfortable plugging credit card numbers into browsers. Amazon accounts for just 5% of U.S. retail sales today,
but its market share is expected to surge as traditional players' revenue
dwindles.
1. Google
Since its arrival in 1998, Google has become so ingrained in our
vernacular that Merriam Webster added it to the dictionary as
a transitive verb. The multinational tech firm has become synonymous with the
notion of researching anything — you don't "look something up
online," you "Google" it. And it remains the web's most
pervasive search tool, accounting for 97% of the mobile search engine market
and 79% of desktop search engine use, according to recent data from Net Market Share.
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