Although Berners-Lee was relatively light on detail at that time, the full contract was due to be published in May 2019. The plan got delayed by almost 6 months and was completely unveiled on Saturday, 23rd November 2019.
The agenda of this Contract is to make the online world safe, empowering and genuinely welcoming for everyone. Contract for the Web outlines nine principles inviting governments, companies, civil society organizations and individuals to back the Contract and uphold its principles and clauses. The contract has nine core principles, while underneath them is a total of 76 clauses.
Contract for the Web has been worked on by 80 organizations for more than a year. It has the backing of more than 150 organizations, from Microsoft, Google, Facebook, Twitter, Reddit, DuckDuckGo along with the digital rights group the Electronic Frontier Foundation. Amazon remained notable absent from endorsing the principles.
Ensure everyone can connect to the internet
Keep all of the internet available, all of the time
Respect and protect people’s fundamental online privacy and data rights
Make the internet affordable and accessible to everyone
Respect and protect people’s privacy and personal data to build online trust
Develop technologies that support the best in humanity and challenge the worst
Launching the Contract, Sir Tim said, “The power of the web to transform people’s lives, enrich society and reduce inequality is one of the defining opportunities of our time. But if we don’t act now — and act together — to prevent the web being misused by those who want to exploit, divide and undermine, we are at risk of squandering that potential.
He added, “The forces taking the web in the wrong direction have always been very strong, whether you’re a company or a government, controlling the web is a way to make huge profits or a way of ensuring you remain in power. The people are arguably the most important part of this because it’s only the people who will be motivated to hold the other two to account.”
The plan releases at a crucial moment in time as large internet companies like Facebook and Google are facing heightened regulatory pressure over how they handle consumers’ information and protect their privacy. Recently, Amnesty International released a new report calling for a radical transformation of the tech giants’ core business model. It said that Facebook and Google’s omnipresent surveillance of billions of people poses a systemic threat to human rights. Actor and comedian Sacha Baron Cohen also attacked Facebook and other social media platforms in his speech at the Anti-Defamation League (ADL). He criticized them for enabling the proliferation of hate speech and misinformation describing Facebook as “the greatest propaganda machine in history”.
However, the fact that Google and Facebook have signed up for this plan raised eyebrows. A comment on Hacker news reads, “Does Google and Facebook "signing" it means they agree to abide by the plan? If not, signing it means nothing. If so, then either they are lying, or the plan imposes so few restrictions that it is worthless.”
The plan itself was met with mixed reactions on social media. While some appreciated and backed the contract.
https://twitter.com/dsmooney/status/1198785438976221184
https://twitter.com/hopkinsdavid/status/1198859610481934336
Others felt that the plan isn't taking any strong stances and provides zero actionable guidance.
A comment on Hacker News reads, “I'm sorry, but this just sounds like a bunch of feel-good babble that isn't taking anything seriously. Free speech? Fundamental rights? "Support the best in humanity"? "Build strong communities"?
Yes, these are all good things. But also all in deep, fundamental conflict with each other. Moral and political philosophers have been debating how to resolve them for centuries... and the disagreements are just as strong as ever.”
Another said, “This new scheme is a sort of UN for Web 1.0? And, like the UN, one that is totally powerless beyond sternly written letters and is governed by some of the greatest infringers of the very rights it's claiming to protect?”
You can back the Contract for the Web at contractfortheweb.org. Read the full contract here.
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