Tim Berners-Lee
|
The
computer scientist credited with inventing the World Wide Web says affordable
access to the Internet should be recognized as a human right, as a report
showed that billions of people still cannot go online and government
surveillance and censorship are increasing.
The
Associated Press reports Tim Berners-Lee said Thursday the Internet can help
tackle inequality — but only if it comes with the rights to privacy and freedom
of expression. The Briton, who launched the Web in 1990, made the remarks as he
released his World Wide Web Foundation's latest report tracking the Internet's
global impact.
The
Web Index found that laws preventing mass online surveillance are weak or
nonexistent in more than 84 percent of countries. It also said that almost 40
percent of surveyed countries were blocking sensitive online content to a
"moderate or extreme degree," and that half of all Web users live in
countries that severely restrict their rights online.
Almost
4.4 billion people — most of them in developing countries — still have no
access to the Internet, the Web Index said.
"It's
time to recognize the Internet as a basic human right," Berners-Lee said.
"That means guaranteeing affordable access for all, ensuring Internet
packets are delivered without commercial or political discrimination, and
protecting the privacy and freedom of Web users regardless of where they
live."
Denmark,
Finland, and Norway were ranked as top overall, meaning they were best at using
the Internet for economic, political and social progress. At the bottom of a
list of 86 countries were Yemen, Myanmar and Ethiopia.
Berners-Lee
was working an engineer at the CERN laboratory in Geneva when he proposed the
idea of a World Wide Web in 1989.
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