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Tim Berners-Lee on Blogging And The Web

neiljt writes "The BBC2 is to air an interview by Marc Lawson with Tim Berners-Lee this evening, where TBL offers his thoughts on the Read/Write web. A transcript of the interview is available from BBC News." From the article: "I feel that we need to individually work on putting good things on [the web], finding ways to protect ourselves from accidentally finding the bad stuff, and that at the end of the day, a lot of the problems of bad information out there, things that you don't like, are problems with humanity. This is humanity which is communicating over the web, just as it's communicating over so many other different media. I think it's a more complicated question we have to; first of all, make it a universal medium, and secondly we have to work to make sure that that it supports the sort of society that we want to build on top of it. "

3 of 226 comments (clear)

  1. Who and who? by xxxJonBoyxxx · · Score: 3, Informative
    "Marc Lawson with Tim Berners-Lee"

    Who and who?

    1. Re:Who and who? by Jeff+Hornby · · Score: 3, Informative

      Marc Lawson seems to be a famous UK journalist (he works for the BBC)

      Tim Berners-Lee invented the world wide web. Note that's the WWW, not the internet. TBL's main contribution was HTTP and HTML. It's come a long way since then but it's still all based on the same technologies.

      --
      Why doesn't Slashdot ever get slashdotted?
  2. Re:He likes "blogs" by an_mo · · Score: 4, Informative

    If you read his autobiography, you'll see that what he had in mind for a browser is to always have an editor attached that would seamlessly allow people to contribute to the web (something he mentioned in the interview as well). He coded his browser to do that, he didn't want people to have to learn HTML in order to contribute. Other browser coders (including and especially NCSA Mosaic's, then Netscape's Andreessen) didn't see that as a crucial feature.

    Blogs and wikis implement that idea server-side, that's what he likes about them; it's not about the content.