
Berners-Lee tried to remind people of the power of the web open and democratic.
"Web evolved into a powerful tool, there is everywhere because it was built on egalitarian principles, and because hundreds of individuals, universities and companies have worked, both independently and together as part of the World Wide Web Consortium, to expand its ability based on the principle it, "Berners-Lee wrote in the journal Scientific America, as quoted by the Telegraph.
Berners-Lee's paper is titled Long Live the Web: A Call for Continued Open Standards and Neutrality.
He later said that the democratic nature and universality are threatened by some of the "most successful residents' lately.
He was particularly critical of Facebook, LinkedIn and Friendster, for limiting the flow of information available free on the web.
"Facebook, LinkedIn, Friendster and more particularly provides value by capturing information as you entered it: your birthday, your e-mail address, your favorite, and 'links' that indicate who the friends with whom and who is in the photo, "Berners-Lee wrote.
"The sites that collect this data in the database a bit bright and reuse that information to provide value added services but only within their sites.
Once you enter data in any of these services, you can not use it in another site with ease. Each site is a silo (airtight building to store fodder), enclose the other, "said Berners-Lee.
"Yes, your web page on the web, but your data is not. You can access the web page on a list of people that you created in one site, but you can not send the list, or items from it, to other sites .
Up under mounting pressure to open up access to the social graph, the most powerful asset. Mark Zuckerberg, founder and leader up, reject this call while at the Web 2.0 Summit. He refused to tell you when Facebook will open a series of data to the entire web.
Earlier this month Google ban Facebook and other companies, to collect data from a Gmail user, until they give their own data available to Google. Up by far the memolak work together.
Berners-Lee in nukilannya also warned that cable companies may also impede the free flow of data on the web.
"Companies that sell cable television internet connectivity considering whether to restrict the Internet users to download only the concoction entertainment company," wrote Berners-Lee.
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