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This Is for Everyone

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The groundbreaking memoir from the inventor of the World Wide Web, Sir Tim Berners-Lee. This is the story of our modern age.

The most influential inventor of the modern world, Sir Tim Berners-Lee is a different kind of visionary. Born in the same year as Bill Gates and Steve Jobs, Berners-Lee famously shared his invention, the World Wide Web, for no commercial reward. Its widespread adoption changed everything, transforming humanity into the first digital species. Through the web, we live, work, dream and connect.

In this intimate memoir, Berners-Lee tells the story of his iconic invention, exploring how it launched a new era of creativity and collaboration while unleashing a commercial race that today imperils democracies and polarizes public debate. As the rapid development of artificial intelligence heralds a new era of innovation, Berners-Lee provides the perfect guide to the crucial decisions ahead – and a gripping, in-the-room account of the rise of the online world.

Filled with Sir Tim's characteristic optimism, technical insight and wry humour, this is a book about the power of technology – both to fuel our worst instincts and to profoundly shape our lives for the better. This Is for Everyone is an essential read for understanding our times and a bold manifesto for advancing humanity’s future.

384 pages, Hardcover

First published September 9, 2025

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About the author

Tim Berners-Lee

20 books105 followers
Sir Timothy John "Tim" Berners-Lee, OM, KBE, FRS, FREng, FRSA, DFBCS (born 8 June 1955), also known as "TimBL", is a British computer scientist, best known as the inventor of the World Wide Web. He made a proposal for an information management system in March 1989, and he implemented the first successful communication between a Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) client and server via the Internet sometime around mid November.

Berners-Lee is the director of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), which oversees the Web's continued development. He is also the founder of the World Wide Web Foundation, and is a senior researcher and holder of the Founders Chair at the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL). He is a director of the Web Science Research Initiative (WSRI), and a member of the advisory board of the MIT Center for Collective Intelligence.

In 2004, Berners-Lee was knighted for his pioneering work. In April 2009, he was elected a foreign associate of the United States National Academy of Sciences. He was honoured as the "Inventor of the World Wide Web" during the 2012 Summer Olympics opening ceremony, in which he appeared in person, working with a vintage NeXT Computer at the London Olympic Stadium. He tweeted "This is for everyone", which instantly was spelled out in LCD lights attached to the chairs of the 80,000 people in the audience.

In June 2009 then British Prime Minister Gordon Brown announced Berners-Lee would work with the UK Government to help make data more open and accessible on the Web, building on the work of the Power of Information Task Force. Berners-Lee and Professor Nigel Shadbolt are the two key figures behind data.gov.uk, a UK Government project to open up almost all data acquired for official purposes for free re-use. Commenting on the opening up of Ordnance Survey data in April 2010 Berners-Lee said that: "The changes signal a wider cultural change in Government based on an assumption that information should be in the public domain unless there is a good reason not to—not the other way around." He went on to say "Greater openness, accountability and transparency in Government will give people greater choice and make it easier for individuals to get more directly involved in issues that matter to them."

In November 2009, Berners-Lee launched the World Wide Web Foundation in order to "Advance the Web to empower humanity by launching transformative programs that build local capacity to leverage the Web as a medium for positive change."

Berners-Lee is one of the pioneer voices in favour of Net Neutrality, and has expressed the view that ISPs should supply "connectivity with no strings attached," and should neither control nor monitor customers' browsing activities without their expressed consent. He advocates the idea that net neutrality is a kind of human network right: "Threats to the Internet, such as companies or governments that interfere with or snoop on Internet traffic, compromise basic human network rights."

Berners-Lee joined the board of advisors of start-up State.com, based in London.

As of May 2012, Berners-Lee is President of the Open Data Institute.

The Alliance for Affordable Internet (A4AI) was launched in October 2013 and Berners-Lee is leading the coalition of public and private organisations that includes Google, Facebook, Intel and Microsoft. The A4AI seeks to make Internet access more affordable so that access is broadened in the developing world, where only 31% of people are online. Berners-Lee will help to decrease internet access prices so that they fall below the UN Broadband Commission's worldwide target of 5% of monthly income.

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Profile Image for Alan Chrisman.
76 reviews67 followers
November 4, 2025
Author is THE man responsible for invention of the World Wide Web(www) and came up with idea of using hyper text links and abbreviations we use everyday: Http, HTML, URL. He wanted internet to be for everyone. He didn't do it for commercial reasons. Everyone should read this book; you don't have to be a computer geek to understand as he explains it in basic language. A few giant multinational corporations like Microsoft,Google, Meta as we know now control most of it who are taking our data to sell and make enormous profits. He believes in the good and bad of technology and says the same could happen with AI, if we don't put controls on it.
Profile Image for CatReader.
1,077 reviews204 followers
October 20, 2025
Tim Berners-Lee (b. 1955) is a British computer scientist whose claim to fame is inventing the world wide web circa 1990, including many of the innovations that made this possible including hypertext markup language (HTML), hypertext transfer protocol (HTTP) clients, and the uniform resource locator (URL; Berners-Lee prefers the term 'universal resource locator' but was outvoted) system. Of note, Berners-Lee didn't invent the internet, which predates the WWW.

This is for Everyone, published in 2025 as Berners-Lee has entered his 70s, is mostly a memoir of the author's fascinating career journey, though more of the sort of "I did this, then I did that, then this happened, and this is how I reacted" than the more reflective, circumspect sort I resonate more strongly with. Berners-Lee also shares his impressions of artificial intelligence and his hopes for the future of the web.

Further reading: memoirs and reflections about the past and future web/technology
The Third Wave: An Entrepreneur's Vision of the Future by Steve Case
The Worlds I See: Curiosity, Exploration, and Discovery at the Dawn of AI by Fei-Fei Li
How To Think About AI: A Guide For The Perplexed by Richard Susskind
Code Dependent: Living in the Shadow of AI by Madhumita Murgia

My statistics:
Book 319 for 2025
Book 2245 cumulatively
Profile Image for Kara Babcock.
2,119 reviews1,604 followers
February 14, 2026
We joke about being “chronically online,” but for me it was kind of true. I always date my debut online to March 2004. My younger brother was allowed to create an MSN/Hotmail account so he could chat with all his friends through MSN Messenger. Envious, I demanded equality—and then pushed the boundaries further by asking if I could make a website. Having duly received permission from my parents, I learned HTML in seven days thanks to the aptly named HTML Goodies dot com. The rest is history. I never looked back, and it is a wonder I didn’t fall down some rabbit hole of radicalization! With the predictable patina of nostalgia that gradually settles over everything from thirty-five onwards, I look back at the halcyon days of 2004–2014 as “the golden age” of the web—though I am sure Tim Berners-Lee would say it was merely the silver age, golden having come and gone a decade prior.

This Is for Everyone: The Unfinished Story of the World Wide Web is both a history of the web and a memoir of the man who invented it. Berners-Lee provides an account of the events leading up to the web’s creation and launch in a way that literally no one else could. From there, he chronicles how the web spread beyond a few academic institutions to become one of the defining technologies of the information age. Then, he discusses the current challenges of keeping the web open and interoperable in the face of algorithmic social media, data mining, and AI.

There are a few ways to look at this book. It’s a history, a memoir, and a manifesto. Let’s pull on each thread before examining all three in concert.

I was most excited for the history aspects of This Is for Everyone. I’m not one for hero worship or Great Man theory or whatnot; I am grateful to Berners-Lee for his contributions but don’t care to idolize him. Nevertheless, if anyone can write a unique history of the web, it would be him! I have known the broad strokes for a long time, and as the book gets closer and closer to the present day, I was increasingly familiar with everything, of course. Yet the first couple of chapters in particular are utterly fascinating. I knew, for example, that the web began as literally a single PC with a post-it note warning people not to turn it off. This is only the tip of the iceberg, however, and Berners-Lee shares all the stories, from his bosses at CERN going to bat for his crazy shenanigans to a missed-connection moment with Steve Jobs that could have changed everything.

Along the way, Berners-Lee himself does his best to counter the Great Man theory by doling out credit where credit is due. He carefully disambiguates “the web” from “the internet,” even though we tend to use these terms interchangeably in common parlance. He gives a lot of credit to Vint Cerf, rightly, for his involvement in the base technology of the internet, which Berners-Lee later selected as the underlying technology for HTTP. He invokes Rivest-Shamir-Adleman and Jobs and Bill Atkinson and Marc Andreessen (that last one … oof, wow). This Is for Everyone makes it very clear that while Berners-Lee got the web off the ground, he did so standing on the shoulders of giants and eventually working with collaborators who elevated his creation from a working concept to something that could span the globe and transform our lives.

This is where we shade into memoir, for Berners-Lee definitely positions himself as the champion of the open web. He politely yet firmly condemns people like Andreessen who saw the web as a potential profit source. Meanwhile, he celebrates his wins at keeping the web open, from ensuring CERN relinquished any intellectual property rights to establishing the W3C. I’m not trying to diminish Berners-Lee’s impact here: if he were a different person, the web would not be what it is today. He could have tried to profit off it to be sure (more on this in a moment). So I do believe we owe Berners-Lee a debt for that.

Indeed, This Is for Everyone excels at poking that “what if” part of the brain. I couldn’t help myself from dreaming up counterfactuals, from the one proposed by Berners-Lee himself when Jobs just misses seeing his demo to a myriad other possibilities. What if Berners-Lee’s managers hadn’t championed this side project and CERN had shut him down? What if he had never got his hands on a NeXT? A technology like the world wide web was likely inevitable given our trajectory. However, as Berners-Lee’s storytelling explains here, there were plenty of forks in the road where our timeline might have diverged to result in—for better or worse—something very different from today’s web.

To return for a moment to the man and the memoir, though: Berners-Lee comes off as very charismatic and humble herein, yet he seems ultimately unable (or unwilling) to grapple with the power structures at work that positioned him to invent the web. Berners-Lee benefitted along so many axes: class, race, gender, even nationality helped him open doors and be taken seriously in a way that a marginalized inventor of the web might not have been. I say this not to take away from the magnitude of Berners-Lee’s achievements. Also, it’s important to note that he himself acknowledges the brilliance of many women involved in the internet and web’s development, alongside women like his mother, a formidable mathematician in her own right. Nevertheless, from his string of marriages to the way he gradually turns into his jet-setting philanthropist by the end of the book … I picked up this really uncomfortable undercurrent of “look at Tim Berners-Lee: he gave away the web for free; he’s not like other rich white men!” And look, maybe Berners-Lee has done the work and the readings and gone to the marches and is secretly funding a bunch of revolutionary leftist organizations, I don’t know … all I can judge is this book, and the book is—unsurprisingly—very charitable to him.

I have similar mixed feelings about Berners-Lee’s views on the values enshrined in the web and how to preserve them. The last chapters of the book are mostly manifesto. He discusses the threats faced by the open web and what to do about them. For many, including myself, these issues are already well known. What is striking, however, was probably how early Berners-Lee recognized the potential for the web to go horribly wrong:


With the web, we were at the outset of something major, and we had to design it with the human being first in mind. We had to build a system that gave humans the ability to make links around the world, but one that avoided ensnaring them in a dead-end, anti-human materialism, or systems of surveillance, coercion, and control.


Oops! That’s from Chapter 3, “Ignition,” and all I can say is … oof, pretty much all of that has come to pass, despite Berners-Lee’s best efforts. In this sense, I agree with his politics!

So far, however, it seems like Berners-Lee will not be the one to shepherd the second coming of the web. He spends a far amount of pages championing his Solid project, a new type of protocol designed for the storage and communication of personal data. I had never had of Solid before despite it being around for nearly ten years and receiving a great deal of corporate investment. It feels DOA, at least without a great deal of regulatory changes, and Berners-Lee comes across in these chapters are out of touch.

Likewise, I’m very disappointed in how uncritically he embraces LLMs. I had this moment where he starts talking about how great they are and how he uses them to help him write his Design Issues blog, and I literally went, “Oh, TimBL, noooooooooo.” It’s like watching someone you respect shovelling a massive handful of mud into their mouth and then happily chewing and swallowing it; what are you doing, my guy? The oceans are boiling and your toys are running rampant across your web, threatening the stability and durability of the entire project, and you think they’re cool??

I want to say, “Make it make sense,” but the dismissive part of me simply wants to spread her hands and shrug: so-called “smart” rich white guys really are vulnerable to “cool technology” vibes.

But I digress. These criticisms in mind, I still recommend This Is for Everyone. Stephen Witt (author of How Music Got Free ) did a good job ghostwriting. Maybe this is just nostalgia-bait for my addled millennial mind, but this book got me thinking. Thinking about possibilities, about progress, about politics. If you can sweep aside the memoir and manifesto parts, the history part is illuminating indeed. I love the web, and for that I owe much to Tim Berners-Lee. He or CERN could have sold it. They made it for everyone, and as much as I criticize him, I believe Berners-Lee truly believes in his mission to keep the web open. For that, I am grateful.

Originally posted on Kara.Reviews.

Creative Commons BY-NC License
437 reviews
September 9, 2025
Informative but written in a way everyone can understand.
Profile Image for Amelie.
83 reviews
January 22, 2026
4,75 Sterne! Super interessant und inspirierend, vor allem das historische. Die Schlusskapitel bisschen langatmig.
Profile Image for Kimberlee.
484 reviews4 followers
September 16, 2025
I received a free digital audiobook copy of this title from NetGalley. All thoughts are my own.

I am probably the exact correct audience for this. As someone who was born in 1990, I've often used the anecdote that "I'm as old as the world wide web" when doing computer classes at my library. That's fudging the truth just a bit, but not by much. When I was a grad student in a Library Science program, there was a lot of classwork I did revolving around describing what the internet is and isn't, how accessible it is to the public, and how information is contained, disseminated, and misrepresented on the world wide web. I also am of the generation that was coding my own themes for Myspace, Xanga, Neopets, and Gaiaonline. Even now, html and css help me when I'm editing my library's website, though I'm mostly using a CMS these days.

Despite being called This is for Everyone, I feel like the audience for this book is probably pretty niche. I enjoyed my time learning about the prior development of the web, but when I told my friends what I was reading, they got that sort of glazed look in their eyes indicating that I was the only person having fun. (Though the developers on acid story got some attention.) I've found in my years of teaching about computers and tech support to basic users that sometimes people want you to just fix the thing. They aren't interested in learning what http means or why "s" at the end was such a big deal. Burners-Lee alludes to this in the book when talking about product development. First the thing has to go to the geeks. Then it has to be made user friendly so a general audience can pick it up. This book is like that. I feel that the end user is going to find the technical details a slog, but people already in the space will find it pretty interesting and maybe nostalgic.

I liked that AI was specifically touched on and was talked about in a measured way. There are a lot of issues with AI, chiefly the unethical sources of information to train LLMs and the unethical usage on social media creating deep fakes, but AI is probably here to stay. If AI is to help humanity, policy and lawmakers absolutely cannot be as slow to regulate and put up guardrails as they have been for other technology issues. Burners-Lee seems genuinely optimistic about the future of AI but is also cognizant of the deep and troubling issues surrounding data sovereignty and the division of a user's data.

My only true criticism is that sometimes it was difficult to understand what time period I was in reading this book. I would be reading about the development of the web in the 90s, but then would be jumped ahead to 2012. Then suddenly the text would go back to the original historical timeline. I know this was to point out how specific pieces of technology had developed and influenced the world, but I sometimes found it disorienting. Otherwise, I enjoyed the book overall and actually think it would be a good supportive tech for my library science program.
Profile Image for Adam Duell.
58 reviews7 followers
October 8, 2025
Outstanding memoir. A fascinating journey through the history of the Worldwide Web and all of the good and bad that have accompanied it, right up to present day, told by the man who created the web itself. Even for the uninitiated, there are countless interesting nuggets of tech history in this book that you might otherwise never learn about. I highly recommend it.

The audiobook version on Spotify, narrated by Stephen Frye, was excellent of course. Frye conducted a half hour interview with Sir Tim Berners-Lee at the end of the book, which made me happy that I’d chosen to listen to the book over reading it in print.
Profile Image for Pete.
1,117 reviews78 followers
January 1, 2026
This is for Everyone (2025) by Tim Berners-Lee is an autobiographical book, a book about the development of the early web and a book about what Berners-Lee now sees as important. Berners-Lee is the inventor of HTML, HTTP and the URL. The ghostwriter Stephen Witt also worked on the book.

Berners-Lee was born in 1955, the same year as Steve Jobs and Bill Gates. It’s quite the coincidence. His parents were mathematicians who worked on one of the first computers in Britain. They personally knew Alan Turing. Berners-Lee describes his birth year as being about ideal for working on computers. He studied Physics at Oxford and also built a terminal that he turned into a computer. After leaving Oxford he worked in various physics and programming jobs and then got a job at CERN. At CERN he developed the ‘Enquire’ program which was used so that people could share data and notes. Later while working at CERN on computerising their operations he worked on a side project that became the world wide web. He embraced the US TCP/IP protocol and used his knowledge of Standardized Generalized Markup Language (SGML) to come up with Hypertext Markup Language (HTML). He used a Next Computer to write the initial web browsers and servers. It’s fascinating to read about how Berners-Lee saw it all happening.

The web then took off to an incredible degree and Berners-Lee led the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) and worked on standards so that the web would not be owned by a particular company or institution. He was very successful in doing this and the open source community created what is the modern web. In the book he writes about how the W3C balanced the interests of companies, governments and institutions and did manage to steward the web to what it is today.

In the latter part of the book Berners-Lee describes how he has worked on the Semantic Web, that is a web with embedded meaning. This is an interesting concept that hasn’t really taken off. He also writes about the solid web decentralization project that aims to make data more controlled by users and less controlled by large companies. It’s a noble aim and an interesting idea. Berners-Lee also writes about how he see AI developing.

This is for Everyone is an interesting book for anyone interested in technology. It’s great to have someone like Berners-Lee write a memoir about his work in developing the world wide web and it’s interesting to read his views on where the internet is now.
Profile Image for Christian Zelger.
35 reviews
December 24, 2025
Das Buch ist eine Zeitreise zurück an die Anfänge des World Wide Web, das viele fälschlicherweise mit dem Internet gleichsetzen. Erzählt wird die Geschichte im Rahmen der Autobiographie seines Erfinders. Er gibt einen Einblick in die (technischen) Hintergründe und richtungsweisenden Entscheidungen und zeigt einmal mehr, wie einzelne Menschen etwas antreiben können, das die Welt verändert, weil sie von einer Idee überzeugt sind.
Profile Image for lamb.
21 reviews1 follower
February 24, 2026
I’m definitely more of an optimist for society (and more pessimistic on a personal individual level) about the prospect of the future both in politics and on the whole about AI. Tim ends with lots of optimism - I see similarities between his experience with fighting for the openness of the Web and the current “battle” AI. For me it’s a mental battle about where I should place myself in this new age of AI. How best can I use my time to up-skill and stay relevant. At present the fear stems from uncertainty about my own future, rather than the risks of super intelligent AI.

Anyway, this was co-written with Stephen Witt, who seemed to previously have also written a Jensen Huang biography. The language itself is simplistic and attempts to explain any jargon used, which is befitting of the title.

I would have preferred a stricter chronological structure, as sometimes timelines jumped back and forth, making the ordering of innovations difficult to follow. Either way it gives a comprehensive history of the Web - important to distinguish the web (HTTP/ and later HTTPS, HTML, and URLS) from the internet (TCP/IP Protocol)!! I used these words interchangeably before reading this.

It starts with Tim’s childhood, where he grew up near Richmond as the son of mathematicians and computer scientists. His parents seem to have heavily influenced his love for both computers, and Nature. If I have children, I’d like to create my own version of his mother’s rotary wall calendar. Imagine a circular calendar where it begins with January 1st at 12 o’clock and ends with December 31st at 11:59pm.

To be honest the entirety of his career and the contents of the book is summarised pretty well on his Wikipedia page already. What you can gain from the book itself are his thoughts about the work of other people he deemed contributed (or in some cases prohibited) his vision for the web being open, free and empowering for everyone. Important examples I learned were how damaging Microsoft was (esp. Internet Explorer) in restricting interoperability in order to grow monopoly power. Similarly, Marc Andreesen tried to do the same, first with the browser Mosaic, and later Netscape. But Netscape did create JavaScript in the process (Microsoft’s JScript was outcompeted). Throughout Tim’s life he has done his best to establish standards for the World Wide Web to prevent this behaviour, such as via the W3 Consortium, or the Web Foundation that fought for net neutrality. Net neutrality is when internet providers do not favour, or block specific data packets e.g. prioritise Facebook data packets. He was also instrumental in UK data transparency, which led to the creation of data.gov.uk and the Open Data Institute.

Some concepts I learned more about (also through separate googling):
- Consistent hashing
This is used in caching websites to prevent “slashdotting” which is when a popular site crashes due to too many people trying to access it at the same time. Similar to a denial of service attack but unintentional. Consistent hashing is what fuels Content Delivery Networks, and Amazon’s DynamoDB.
- Collective filtering
A recommendation system technique that predicts user preferences by analysing behaviour patterns and similarities among multiple users or items.
- Narrowcast vs broadcasting
Broadcasting is when misinformation is widespread, like a bus advertisement
Narrowcasting is micro-targeted advertisements, making it harder to trace the misinformation
- DNS was non-profit but after the dotcom era, the US government auctioned it off to private firms, like Verisign :(
- Existence of the Contract for the Web, and the Ditchley Foundation in the UK
- W3 Consortium created PNG as an open-source, non-patented and lossless version of GIFs

Most notable is Tim’s work on the Solid protocol (solidproject.org). The idea of Solid is that every individual has their own “pod” or “digital wallet”. Any data generated for or by you, such as financial or health records, social media connections, etc. is stored in your pod. This allows you to have full data sovereignty, and you are able to fully control who has access to what data, and when. You have full power to revoke permissions at any point also. The main benefit of having this data stored in one single pod owned by you is that you can allow applications or services to access any of this data. For example, enabling your fitness training app to have access to your bank statements, and health records to tailor a specific training plan for you. It might recognise that you already pay for certain yoga classes, or have a certain health condition and can tailor the plan exactly to your needs. Once it creates the plan, you can remove access to your data but keep the plan it produced.

The Solid protocol is currently used in the Flanders' government, and various health providers in Australia, and the NHS in Manchester.

Another example Tim uses is Charlie the AI assistant that works for You. Not for Big Tech (maximising profits, screen-time, inc. polarization and so on….)

You want to find out what running shoes you should buy. You let Charlie access your health and financial data.. Charlie is able to identify that you suffered from an ankle injury a couple years ago, caused by overpronation and also that you own an American Express card. Combining this, Charlie suggests you go for a certain stability shoe, at a certain shop because you get a large discount by paying with AMex. As with the previous example, once you are happy with the decision, you delete your data so Charlie no longer has access to it.

This is a shortened version of the example Tim gives at https://www.w3.org/DesignIssues/Works...

If social media, or other corporations bought into the Solid Protocol, it would benefit both themselves and the individual. They can offer even better suggestions, but instead of advising on the behalf of their real customers (advertisers), they advise with the individual’s best interest in mind. He mentions the Attention vs Intention economy, where Attention economies are trying to distract consumers and Intention economies are trying to assist consumers. AI was originally moving us towards the Intention, but as ChatGPT starts increasing advertisements, we are certainly shifting back to Attention.

I really buy into his idea of Solid and think it is a good solution for trying to reduce the friction in our lives. Having all our data in one pod could let us automate filling out long tax forms, or even shorter ones like delivery addresses at checkouts. Perhaps this is what OpenClaw benefits from? The ability to access all your data, unbounded on a single device. The difference for me is data access for OpenClaw seems harder to understand exactly how to restrict, and doesn’t solve the issue of large corporations making it incredibly difficult for you to gain access to the data they have on you. Another thing is nowadays with integration solutions, such as Palantir’s NHS Federated Data Platform (FDP) the aim is the integrate the database of NHS trusts. This does allow us to gain back our data sovereignty as individuals - so if we took the Solid approach, then we can easily integrate the data (with consent) on our side.
I need to hash these thoughts out more.

Sometimes Tim humble brags about his award ceremonies, or being part of the Order of Merit (I did not know this can only include 24 people at any one time), but if I think about what he has achieved, he does really deserve it. Random fact: The date on the first proposal for the Web is March 1989 so Tim chose his mother’s birthday, March 12th, as the Web’s anniversary.

He greatly encourages people to channel “inter-creativity” by creating and collaborating together on the Web.
I’m always flip flopping between not having any information about myself online vs sharing…maybe if the Web was less sinister overall I’d feel more compelled to share.

I’ve never read a book so soon after it’s been published. Thank you Van Pelt Library for your new book display. It’s nice to finally have recent examples from 2025 or 2024 referenced hahaha
Profile Image for Sophia.
420 reviews2 followers
October 17, 2025
I genuinely didn't think this was going to be as interesting as it was. I don't even like the internet anymore, I'm just obsessed with it as a concept and I need to know where we collectively take this experiment. I loved how left wing Tim is. He felt no shame in sharing his opinions about big tech monopolies and how neoliberaal social media companies are commofifying all of us through data collection. I feel more empowered than ever to take back the internet.
Profile Image for Austin Carter.
141 reviews
October 4, 2025
perhaps I had too high of expectations for this one ..
started very interesting and nostalgic. I was mostly interested in what was going on at CERN in the late 80s and early 90s
unfortunately the ending becomes increasingly generic and at time outright ostentatious as the author focuses on awards ceremonies and social gatherings. then again, it is a memoir, so take that as you may.
then finally, it turned into a sales pitch for a decent idea but which has been privatized.. that being the data pods or wallets. I'm sure we will move in that direction in time.
unfortunately the author seems like a figurehead, and not directly influential in the AI tsunami
22 reviews1 follower
January 3, 2026
"We face a profound challenge. Polarization on the web and mental health problems arising from social media use must be addressed. Until they are fixed, it will be hard to get anyone to think about the web in a positive light."

Part memoir, part technological recap, and part dissection of the social issues on the web, this book is a terrific insight on the state of the digital world from someone most qualified to speak on it. I've found myself discussing with friends and family a lot of the very same issues covered in this book - polarisation, AI ethics, and digital footprint and commodification of the user. reading this book has given me a sense of relief as these same issues are being addressed at the highest levels.

Sir Tim's insights are worth reading by anyone who uses the web regularly - not just because he is technically qualified, but because he is passionate about it. It's restored a sense of optimism for me, that technological development needn't be exclusively at the detriment of those most vulnerable, but can work for everyone.

The book ends with the following: "The immense power of such systems would be as good or evil as we permitted." The web and AI are tools, and ultimately we need to be careful how we wield them, but they can be used for the betterment of all, as was originally intended.
Profile Image for Justin.
5 reviews
February 27, 2026
Fascinating read about the creation of perhaps the most world-changing invention of human history. Berners-Lee tells the tale of how he came to invent and promote the use of his creation; always pushing for a user-focused web that respected privacy, data sovereignty, and empowered humanity to share and collaborate. He posits that, while for-profit enterprise and nefarious, exploitative social media has largely sucked the soul out of the web, humanity can still work to restore a harmonious version of the web that once was. A version that puts users back in the driver's seat, empowering them to communicate, collaborate, and share without the claws and prying eyes of greedy technological juggernauts exploiting our minds and mental health in the name of profit.

I really enjoyed this book as Berners-Lee's vision and ideals closely align with my own. I too am skeptical and critical of social media, and I'm a big proponent and user of free open-source software.

The beauty of the web is, and always has been, bringing humanity together in the name of mutual benefit. When money and proprietary tech got involved, we strayed from the guiding light. I am hopeful Berners-Lee's vision will become reality. I know I'm doing my part!
Profile Image for Yuvaraj kothandaraman.
148 reviews2 followers
November 13, 2025
This book is a thoughtful, personal look at the invention and evolution of the web by its creator, Tim Berners Lee.
It shares inspiring stories about how the web went from a simple idea to a global platform that unleashed creativity and connection worldwide.
A key spoiler is Berners-
Lee’s candid admission of struggles, like the “Eternal September” -when the web opened to the public in 1994, disrupting the polite internet culture, and his fight to keep the web open and royalty-free amid corporate pressures.
While technical at times, the human side- his vision for an inclusive, accessible, and free web shines through. It’s a must read for anyone who cares about the web’s future, though the pace can drag when going deep into standards or organizational politics.

Profile Image for Lucinda.
113 reviews
November 10, 2025
I really enjoyed the unfaltering optimism which permeated this book. Berners-Lee's passion for the web, his acknowledgement of where it has gone wrong but his absolute belief in the ability of the web to return to being a place of innovation, creativity, collaboration, community and positivity is refreshing. There is still hope 🤍
Profile Image for Tyler Mauer.
61 reviews
October 9, 2025
An extremely timely and optimistic commentary on the current state and history of the internet. I don't often read memoirs, but I quite enjoyed this book.
Profile Image for Rebecca.
284 reviews29 followers
dnf
January 15, 2026
DNF @ page 143

As interesting as this story is, I'm getting a bit tired of the "and this happened, then this happened.." way of telling it. Maybe I'll come back to it in the future.
Profile Image for Max.
295 reviews8 followers
February 24, 2026
An engaging slice of history and look at the evolution of the tech. Feels a lot optimistic about the future, but hey, that's the only way to make things suck less.
Profile Image for Karin Jenkins.
867 reviews7 followers
September 25, 2025
Definitely worth reading as a history of the net and our relationship with it though some of the technical stuff went over my head. Tim doesn’t shy away from the problems but it’s optimistic that we can do better.
Profile Image for Matthew Tyas.
177 reviews
November 17, 2025
The writing is not world class but the Berners-Lee’s story is fascinating and his principles are on point. He really nails the challenges of the modern web and spearheads a couple of different initiatives to try and solve these problems.

A really great read.
Profile Image for Caitlin.
29 reviews
January 15, 2026
This was actually so interesting and informative.

Towards the end of the book he speaks about how the internet has changed & grown in a direction he didn’t expect / doesn’t agree with & even the discussion about AI
97 reviews9 followers
December 16, 2025
Interesting read, especially as someone who already worked in tech during the web’s formative years. I appreciated revisiting the early days, but I found the writing less engaging than I'd hoped - too much focus on awards and ceremonies, and not enough on the technology itself. I understand it’s aimed at a broader audience, but that made it less compelling for me. There's also a section that struck me as oddly personal and critical of another figure in web history, which felt out of place. Overall, worth reading, but not quite what I was looking for.
Profile Image for Ana Marinho.
615 reviews30 followers
January 8, 2026
Um livro fenomenal. Uma espécie de autobiografia, mais técnica do que pessoal, escrita de forma tão simples que qualquer pessoa compreende os temas apresentados. Para mim, foi relembrar conceitos, mas também reviver (noutra perspetiva) o surgimento da internet e os avanços tecnológicos. Tim Berners-Lee revolucionou e mudou o mundo. Infelizmente, muitas pessoas se aproveitaram da internet para criar um lado mais obscuro da mesma. Tranquiliza-me saber que o seu criador continua a lutar pelo lado bom, por muito difícil que seja.
É uma excelente obra de não-ficção que recomendo vivamente a todos.
Profile Image for Jessica Haider.
2,233 reviews337 followers
October 7, 2025
4.5 stars

A fascinating, optimistic reminder from the man who literally invented the World Wide Web (yes, that one). Tim Berners-Lee blends history, ethics, and a bit of nerdy idealism to explain how a simple idea—open access for all—became the backbone of modern life. His vision of a free, connected internet feels both nostalgic and urgent, like a love letter to the Web before the algorithms took over. Inspiring stuff—especially if you still believe the internet can be more than ads and outrage.
Profile Image for Jill Ball.
27 reviews4 followers
December 4, 2025
So many issues raised in this history and discussion of the world wide web and its place in our lives. The conversational style and use of simple language made it a delight to read and ponder. Thanks Sir Tim for taking the time to share your thoughts and concerns and make me think. Where can I sign up for Solid?
Profile Image for Jung.
2,002 reviews47 followers
Read
December 4, 2025
"This Is for Everyone: The Unfinished Story of the World Wide Web" opens with the reminder that the internet we depend on today is far from the one its creator originally imagined. Tim Berners-Lee designed the web as an open, decentralized system where ideas could flow freely, linking in the same intuitive way human thought moves. He wanted a platform that encouraged curiosity, collaboration, and problem-solving. Yet over the past decades, the web has gradually shifted toward the opposite: concentrated control in the hands of a few corporations, business models rooted in monetizing attention, and systems that feed polarization rather than cooperation. The book examines not only how the web came to be but also how it can be reclaimed for the purpose it was invented for - serving people rather than exploiting them.

Berners-Lee’s worldview was shaped long before he began building the web. Growing up in London in the 1950s, he lived in a household filled with circuitry, logic puzzles, and the buzz of early computing. His parents were mathematicians and electronic engineers who had worked with the very first commercial computer, and their stories included figures like Alan Turing - whose ideas on computation indirectly influenced the young Tim. At school he immersed himself in math and science fiction, drawn to imagined worlds built from logic and technology. By the time he attended Oxford, he was already tinkering with homemade computers, assembling devices from discarded parts and teaching himself how information systems worked at a fundamental level.

His first major turning point came when he began working at CERN in Geneva in 1980. Although the particle physics labs were filled with enormous scientific machinery, what captivated him was the daily exchange of ideas among scientists from different cultures. He became fascinated with the challenge of helping information spread as naturally as conversation. His early experiment, a program called 'Enquire,' allowed users to link notes together in branching ways, planting the first seed of what would eventually become hypertext. At CERN he realized that a truly powerful information system had to welcome every format, language, and machine - a universal platform that hid complexity beneath simple, intuitive connections.

As the 1990s approached, the pieces clicked into place. With support from colleagues and armed with a NeXT computer provided by a forward-thinking supervisor, he built the tools that formed the backbone of the web: HTML to structure information, HTTP to fetch it, and URLs to identify it. The first web browser and editor rolled these pieces into a coherent system that anyone could learn. His vision was not merely technical; he wanted a network where the structure grew from how people used it rather than predetermined rules. When he and collaborator Robert Cailliau demonstrated the system at a hypertext conference in 1991, audiences could sense the paradigm shift. Within just a few years, traffic to their CERN server grew from a handful of requests to tens of thousands per day.

But Berners-Lee quickly saw a looming danger: whoever controlled the standards could control the web. Early developers and companies were already looking for ways to lock users into proprietary tools or charge licensing fees. To prevent the web from fragmenting or falling under corporate control, CERN made a radical decision in 1993 - they released the foundational software and protocols into the public domain. Anyone could build on them freely. Browsers multiplied, with projects like ViolaWWW and Mosaic attracting millions of new users. Yet as the web expanded, tensions grew between open experimentation and corporate attempts to steer the evolution of features and standards. To create a neutral space for defining how the web should work, Berners-Lee helped establish the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), ensuring that all stakeholders - from startups to global corporations - had an equal voice.

As the web surged into mainstream culture, it became a playground for creativity. Personal sites, online communities, and new design standards like CSS pushed the medium forward. Geocities neighborhoods, Craigslist’s simplicity, and the rise of blogs showcased the web’s democratic spirit. But alongside the creativity came darker forces. Browser wars escalated, and behind them lurked technologies like third-party cookies - data snippets originally meant for convenience but soon repurposed to track users across sites. These tracking tools became the backbone of targeted advertising, enabling organizations to influence behavior, shape political messaging, and ignite social division. The same web that once symbolized openness began to morph into a system that rewarded manipulation.

Still, Berners-Lee remained committed to expanding access and defending human rights online. With his wife, Rosemary Leith, he created the Web Foundation to promote open access worldwide. Their work took them to classrooms in Rwanda and farms in Burkina Faso, where connectivity transformed communities and demonstrated the web’s potential as a force for empowerment. To guide global principles, the foundation drafted the Contract for the Web, outlining responsibilities for governments, companies, and citizens to protect privacy, accessibility, and democracy. But the growth of smartphones and social platforms introduced new vulnerabilities. The web became simultaneously more powerful and more fragile, capable of fueling revolutions yet also enabling authoritarian regimes and unethical data harvesting.

The rise of artificial intelligence introduced another turning point. Advances from research groups like DeepMind demonstrated AI’s potential to solve problems - from protein folding to medical analysis - but also raised fears about deepfakes, misinformation, and opaque data use. Once again, Berners-Lee saw the need for systems rooted in user control. His response was Solid, a decentralized platform built around personal data pods. Under this framework, individuals - not companies - would decide who could access their information. Applications, including AI assistants, would request temporary permission to use specific data, and users could revoke access at any time. It was a return to his original vision: technology serving people, not silently surveilling them.

Solid hinted at a possible future where AI tools work in partnership with individuals rather than mining their private lives. Instead of being tracked across platforms, users would direct their own data flows. Early adopters have begun exploring such decentralized alternatives through platforms like Mastodon, Matrix, and Bluesky, which demonstrate that networks built on open standards can still thrive. The movement resembles the early days of the web - small communities planting the seeds of a healthier digital ecosystem.

In "This Is for Everyone: The Unfinished Story of the World Wide Web", Tim Berners-Lee offers not only a history of the web’s creation but also an argument for its renewal. He shows how a curious child surrounded by logic circuits grew into the architect of a technology that reshaped the world, and how that invention thrived only because it remained open to all. He charts the shifts that turned an idealistic network into a system fueled by tracking, advertising, and political manipulation. Yet he also outlines a path forward - one where decentralized platforms, ethical standards, and user-controlled data can restore trust and reshape the web into the tool it was always meant to be. The book ends with the reminder that the unfinished story of the web is still being written, and that its future depends on decisions we make today.
Profile Image for Jen.
91 reviews1 follower
December 28, 2025
Tim Berners-Lee — the inventor of the World Wide Web himself — takes readers on a fascinating journey through the birth and evolution of one of humanity’s most transformative inventions. ”This is for Everyone“ isn’t just a technical recount; it’s a passionate reflection on the ideals, challenges, and human connections that built the internet as we know it today.



The Human Side of Technology

As a software developer, I went in expecting the usual deep dive into technical architecture and protocols (HTTP, HTML, TCP, etc.), and they did play a role, but what really stands out here are the people and the ideals. Berners-Lee highlights collaboration, curiosity, and a genuine belief in democratizing information. He humanizes the creation process, giving faces and motivations to what’s often portrayed as a sterile technological milestone.

It’s a refreshing perspective — the Web as a community effort rather than a lone genius’s achievement.



Style & Accessibility

The tone is warm, thoughtful, and deeply personal. Berners-Lee writes like someone who’s both an engineer and an idealist — a rare combo (believe me). He explains complex ideas clearly but never condescends, which makes the book accessible to both tech-savvy readers and curious newcomers.

It’s short but dense in spirit; you come away feeling both nostalgic and inspired, a little in awe of how much the Web has evolved — and how much of its founding ethos still matters.



Final Thoughts

”This is for Everyone“ reads like a love letter to the Web — not just the code, but the people and ideals behind it. It’s enlightening, humble, and surprisingly emotional for a book about technology.

You might come for the history, but you’ll stay for the heart. And honestly? After reading it, it’s impossible not to respect Tim Berners-Lee even more than I already did, which was a lot because without him I wouldn’t have a job today. :P

⭐️ 5/5 stars — an inspiring must-read for anyone who lives and breathes the internet.
Profile Image for Rasha.
509 reviews2 followers
December 5, 2025
Curiosity. It is what drives me to read so many different genres covering a variety of subjects. One of the subjects that has come up several times in my reading list of this past year is technology and the perils of social media, data privacy and AI. Among the books that have informed my awareness in 2025 are: “Nexus”, “Supremacy” “The Anxious Generation” and “Careless People” (all of which are worth a read). So learning more about the origins of the technology that has such a huge impact on our day-to-day life, from one of its founders, was a no brainer.

Berners-Lee has written a memoir that covers his life and how he came to invent the worldwide web. While this was very interesting, I found the best part of his book was hearing his opinion on the results of his invention so many years later. What was intended to launch a new era of creativity and communication has now resulted in new technologies that are potential threats to humanity.

Despite this, what shines through is his positivity. Despite everything, he still carries hope that with the right tools, we can overcome the possible perils. The most exciting thing however is that he actually provides a new possible blueprint for data privacy and protection that would still allow us to use technology in a way to benefit us all.

We can only hope that his position as a ‘founding father of the Internet’ is enough to get big tech to pay attention.

4.75 stars 🤓📚

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