The World Wide Web: Crash Course Computer Science #30

Today we’re going to discuss the World Wide Web – not to be confused with the Internet, which is the underlying plumbing for the web as well as other networks. The World Wide Web is built on the foundation of simply linking pages to other pages with hyperlinks, but it is this massive interconnectedness that makes it so powerful. But before the web could become a thing, Tim Berners-Lee would need to invent the web browser at CERN, and search engines would need to be created to navigate these massive directories of information. By the mid-1990s, we will see the rise of Yahoo and Google and monolithic websites like eBay and Amazon, forming the web we know today. But before we end our unit on the Internet we want to take a moment to discuss the implications of Net Neutrality, and its potential to shape the Internet’s future.

Produced in collaboration with PBS Digital Studios.

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