More than 30 years ago, on March 12, 1989, Berners-Lee unwittingly made history by laying the groundwork of what would later become known as the World Wide Web. Working at the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) at the time, Berners-Lee distributed a paper to his colleagues entitled “Information Management: A Proposal”, in which he suggested creating a networked hypertext system to help CERN manage and share information within its organization.
“We should work toward a universal linked information system”, Berners-Lee wrote in his conclusion, adding that “the aim would be to allow a place to be found for any information or reference which one felt was important, and a way of finding it afterwards. The result should be sufficiently attractive to use that it the information [sic] contained would grow past a critical threshold, so that the usefulness the scheme [sic] would in turn encourage its increased use”. While this sounds like a fancy description of the internet as we know it, it wasn’t until the next year that Berners-Lee coined the term WorldWideWeb in another proposal co-authored by Robert Calliau, which was still targeted at the scientific community rather than the global public.
Despite its name and apparent ubiquity, however, 32 years into its existence the World Wide Web is not nearly as universally available as its name suggests. According to the latest estimates by the International Telecommunication Union, a UN agency specializing in information and communication technologies, only 63 out of 100 world citizens use the internet in 2021. While internet access in regions such as North America and Europe has become a commodity not unlike electricity and running water, people in less developed regions often still lack access to what has arguably become the most important source of information of our times. This is reflected in the fact that internet penetration ranges from 90.3 percent across developed countries to 57.1 percent in developing countries and less than 30 percent in the least developed countries in the world.
Reference: https://www.statista.com/chart/3512/internet-adoption-in-2015/
[EDITOR] In a related article, Felix Richter views the issue from another perspective and shows the difference between online vs offline people in the world:
Disconnected: 2.9 Billion People Still Offline
New data published by the International Communication Union (ITU), the UN agency for information and communication technologies, has revealed that almost 3 billion people have never used the internet and are thus cut off from a vital source of information, communication and education.
According to the latest estimates from the ITU, 4.9 billion people now use the internet, up from 4.1 billion people in 2019. This unusually sharp increase in internet users is attributed at least partly to what the ITU calls a “COVID connectivity boost”. “Widespread lockdowns and school closures, combined with people’s need for access to news, government services, health updates, e-commerce and online banking” have driven the surge in internet usage according to the organization.
“While almost two-thirds of the world’s population is now online, there is a lot more to do to get everyone connected to the Internet,” ITU Secretary General Houlin Zhao said in a statement. The lack of internet access is most prevalent in developing countries, where 96 percent of the world’s offline population live. The digital divide also persists between rural and urban areas, with urban dwellers twice as likely to use the internet as people living in rural areas (76 percent compared to 39 percent).
While it’s easy to take internet access for granted in developed regions, it is important to note that it is far from a given in many other parts of the world. In fact, internet users were in the minority worldwide as recently as 2018. Back then, 3.7 billion people were using the internet, while 3.9 billion remained disconnected.
Reference: https://www.statista.com/chart/26326/number-of-internet-user-and-non-users-worldwide/
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