The W3C -- A Brief Introduction
Created | Updated Jan 28, 2002
What is the W3C?
The W3C (short for World Wide Web Consortium) is the committee which creates, reviews, and approves the techincal specifiations for the languages and protocols which from the architecture of the World Wide Web.
The W3C has three long-term goals1:
- Universal Access: To make the Web accessible to all by
promoting technologies that take into account the vast differences in
culture, education, ability, material resources, and physical limitations
of users on all continents; - Semantic Web : To develop a software environment that permits
each user to make the best use of the resources available on the Web; - Web of Trust : To guide the Web's development with careful
consideration for the novel legal, commercial, and social issues raised by
this technology.
History
While the idea of the World Wide Web goes back to at least 1945, it is Tim Berners-Lee who is actually credited with turning the concept into a reality. After developing the first proposal for a global hypertext system in 1989 and then writing the first GUI hypertext browser in October of 1990, Berners-Lee's concept caught on like wildfire. Over the next four years, various individuals and companies began writing improvements to the browser, setting up HTTP servers, and generally carrying on the work that Berners-Lee started.
In October of 1994, Berners-Lee founded the World Wide Web Consortium at MIT in cooperation with CERN (European Laboratory for Particle Physics). Over time the W3C evolved into a committee focused on three main concepts2:
- Vision: W3C promotes and develops its vision of the future of
the World Wide Web. Contributions from several hundred dedicated
researchers and engineers working for Member
organizations, from the W3C Team (led by Tim Berners-Lee, the Web's inventor), and
from the entire Web community enable W3C to identify the technical
requirements that must be satisfied if the Web is to be a truly universal
information space. - Design: W3C designs Web technologies to realize this vision,
taking into account existing technologies as well as those of the
future. - Standardization: W3C contributes to efforts to standardize Web
technologies by producing specifications (called "Recommendations") that
describe the building blocks of the Web. W3C makes these Recommendations
(and other technical reports) freely available to
all.
Berners-Lee on Standards and the W3C
"W3C's mission is to realize the full potential of the web, by bringing its members and others together in a neutral forum. The W3C has to move rapidly (time measured in "web years" = 2.6 months) so it cannot afford to have a traditional Standards process. What has happened to date has been that W3C has, by providing a neutral forum and facilitation, and also with the help of its technically astute staff, got a consensus among the developers about a way to go. Then, this has been all that has been needed: once a common specification has been prepared and a general consensus among the experts is seen, companies have been running with that ball. The specifications have become de facto standards. This has happened with for example HTML TABLES, and PICS. Now in fact we have decided to start using not a full standards process, but a process of formal review by the W3C membership, in order to draw attention to specifications, and to cement their status a little. After review by members, the specifications will be known as W3C process." - Tim Berners-Lee, 19963
Organization of the W3C
The W3C's organization is molded by three main concepts. The first of these is vendor and market neutrality. All the hosts and the Team (more than fifty researchers and engineers from around the world) are not affiliated with nor do they endorse any particular software or hardware product. This insures the neutrality of the standards and recommendations being produced.
The second concept is coodination. The World Wide Web is a massive project, and no one group can oversee the whole thing. The W3C has partnered with other organizations like the IETF (Internet Engineering Task Force), the WAP Forum (Wireless Application Protocols Forum), the Unicode Consortium, the Web3D Consortium, and several ISO committees. Since all are working toward a common goal, no one entity has total control over the direction the World Wide Web can take.
The third and final concept is consensus. Consensus is the heart and soul of the W3C's philosophy. The W3C strives to reach unanimous decision on all projects and specifications. When this is not possible, the subject is then opened to a variety of channels for gathering input, such as invited experts, other W3C members, or the general public.
A Little History of the World Wide Web from 1945 to 1995About the World Wide Web Consortium