Web inventor unveils ambitious ‘rule book’ for internet responsibility
Web inventor unveils ambitious ‘rule book’
for internet responsibility
Tim
Berners-Lee’s plan includes framework to protect privacy, personal data
World Wide Web inventor Tim Berners-Lee released an ambitious
rule book for online governance — a bill of rights and obligations for the
internet — designed to counteract the growing prevalence of such
anti-democratic poisons as misinformation, mass surveillance and censorship.
The product of a year’s work by the World Wide Web Foundation
where Berners-Lee is a founding director, the “Contract
for the Web” seeks commitments from governments and industry
to make and keep knowledge freely available — a digital policy agenda true to
the design vision of the 30-year-old web.
The contract is non-binding, however. And funders and partners
in the endeavor include Alphabet’s Google and Facebook, whose data-collecting
business models and sensation-rewarding algorithms have been blamed for
exacerbating online toxicity.
“We haven’t had a fairly complex, fairly complete plan of action
for the web going forward,” Berners-Lee said in an interview. “This is the
first time we’ve had a rule book in which responsibility is being shared.”
For instance, the contract proposes a framework for protecting
online privacy and personal data with clearly defined national laws that give
individuals greater control over the data collected about them. Independent,
well-resourced regulators would offer the public effective means for redress.
Current laws and institutions don’t measure up to that standard.
Amnesty International just released a report charging that
Google and Facebook’s business models are predicated on the abuse of human
rights.
Berners-Lee nevertheless says that “having them in the room is
really important.” He said both companies had approached the foundation seeking
participation.
“We feel that companies and governments deserve equal seats at
the table and understanding where they’re coming from is equally valuable,” he
said. “To have this conversation around a table without the tech companies, it
just wouldn’t have the clout and we wouldn’t have ended up with the insights.”
The nonprofit foundation’s top donors include the Swedish,
Canadian and U.S. governments and the Ford and Omidyar foundations.
One of its biggest challenges is the growing balkanization of
the internet, with national governments led by China, Russia and Iran exerting
increasing technical control over their domestic networks, tightening
censorship and surveillance.
“The trend for balkanization is really worrying and it’s extreme
at the moment in Iran,” said Berners-Lee. A strong government exhibits
tolerance, the computer scientist added, for “other voices, opposition voices,
foreign voices to be heard by its citizens.”
So how to prevent governments from restricting internet access
at their borders?
One approach, said Berners-Lee, could be financial pressure.
Multinational lenders could condition lower interest rates, for example, on a
nation’s willingness to let information flow freely on its domestic network.
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