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            1 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
            2 
            3 <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
            4 <head>
            5   <meta charset="utf-8" />
            6   <meta content=
            7   "HTML Tidy for Mac OS X (vers 31 October 2006 - Apple Inc. build 2649), see www.w3.org"
            8   name="generator" />
            9 
           10   <title>Tim Berners-Lee</title>
           11   <link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="https://www.w3.org/general.css" />
           12   <link href="https://www.w3.org/card.rdf" title="Contact" type="application/rdf+xml"
           13   rel="meta" />
           14   <!-- <link rel="meta" type="application/rdf+xml" title="FOAF" href="card.rdf"/> -->
           15   <link href="http://pip.verisignlabs.com/server" rel=
           16   "openid.server" />
           17   <link href="http://timbl.pip.verisignlabs.com/" rel=
           18   "openid.delegate" />
           19 </head>
           20 
           21 <body>
           22   <table summary="Nav" width="100%" cellpadding="2">
           23     <tbody>
           24       <tr>
           25         <td><p><b>Contents</b></p><p><b><br></b></p></td>
           26 
           27         <th>
           28           <p align="left">See also</p>
           29         </th>
           30 
           31         <th>
           32           <p align="left"><br /></p>
           33         </th>
           34       </tr>
           35 
           36       <tr>
           37         <td><img src=
           38         "https://www.w3.org/Press/Stock/Berners-Lee/2001-europaeum-eighth.jpg"
           39         alt="Tim BL" width="252" height="166" /><br />
           40         <!--
           41             <a href="https://www.battleforthenet.com/"> <img src="images/protest-loading-avatar-replacement.gif"                alt="Loading too slow? Demand Net Neutrality!" width="166" height="166" /></a><br /> --></td>
           42 
           43         <td><a href="#Bio">Short biography</a><br />
           44         <a href="#Address">Address</a><br />
           45         <a href="#Talks">Talks, articles etc</a><br />
           46         <a href="#Speaking">Speaking engagements</a><br />
           47         <a href="#Press">Press interviews</a></td>
           48 
           49         <td><a href="https://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/Longer.html">Longer Biography</a><br />
           50         <a href="https://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/Research.html">Research at MIT-CSAIL</a><br />
           51         <a href="https://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/DesignIssues">Design Issues: web
           52         architecture</a><br />
           53         <a href="/">World Wide Web Consortium<br /></a> <a href=
           54         "https://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/FAQ.html">Frequently Asked Questions</a><br />
           55         <a href="https://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/Kids.html">Kids' Questions</a><br />
           56         <a href="https://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/Weaving/Overview.html">Weaving the Web - the
           57         book</a></td>
           58       </tr>
           59     </tbody>
           60   </table>
           61 
           62   <p><a title="Data about me" href="https://www.w3.org/card#i"><img alt="data" src=
           63   "https://www.w3.org/images/rdf-flyer-24.gif" align="right" /></a></p>
           64 
           65   <h1>Tim Berners-Lee</h1>
           66 
           67   <h2><a id="Bio" name="Bio">Biography</a></h2>
           68 
           69   <p>Sir Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web in 1989.</p>
           70 
           71   <p>He is the co-founder and CTO of <a href=
           72   "https://inrupt.com/">Inrupt.com</a>, a tech start-up which uses,
           73   promotes and helps develop the open source <a href=
           74   "https://solidproject.org">Solid</a> platform. Solid aims to give
           75   people control and agency over their data, questioning many
           76   assumptions about how the web has to work. Solid technically is a new level of standard at the web layer, which adds things
           77   never put into the original spec, such as global single sign-on,
           78   universal access control, and a universal data API so that any
           79   app can store data in any storage place. Socially Solid is a
           80   movement away from much of the issues with the current WWW, and
           81   toward a world in which users are in control, and empowered by
           82   large amounts of data, private, shared, and public.</p>
           83 
           84   <p>Sir Tim is the Founder, Emeritus Director, and an Honorary Member of the Board of Directors of the
           85   <a href="https://www.w3.org">World Wide Web Consortium (W3C)</a>, a Web standards
           86   organization that he founded in 1994 which develops interoperable
           87   technologies (specifications, guidelines, software, and tools) to
           88   lead the Web to its full potential. He is a Director of the
           89   <a href="http://www.webfoundation.org/">World Wide Web
           90   Foundation</a> which was launched in 2009 to coordinate efforts
           91   to further the potential of the Web to benefit humanity.</p>
           92 
           93   <p>A graduate of Oxford University, Sir Tim invented the Web
           94   while at <a href="http://www.cern.ch/">CERN</a>, the European
           95   Particle Physics Laboratory, in 1989. He wrote the first web
           96   client and server in 1990. His specifications of URIs, HTTP and
           97   HTML were refined as Web technology spread.</p>
           98 
           99   <p>He is the Emeritus 3Com Founders Professor of Engineering in the School
          100   of Engineering with a joint appointment in the Department of
          101   Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at the Laboratory for
          102   Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence ( <a href=
          103   "http://csail.mit.edu/">CSAIL</a>) at the Massachusetts Institute
          104   of Technology (<a href="http://web.mit.edu/">MIT</a>) where he founded the <a href="http://dig.csail.mit.edu/">Decentralized
          105   Information Group (DIG)</a>.<br /></p>
          106 
          107   <p>The <a href="http://dig.csail.mit.edu">Decentralized
          108   Information Group</a>, works on the <a href=
          109   "https://solid.inrupt.com">Solid Project</a> to give people
          110   control of their own data and to re-decentralize the Web. He is
          111   the co-founder and CTO of <a href=
          112   "https://inrupt.com">inrupt</a>, the company launched to ensure
          113   the success of the Solid platform and its open source community,
          114   and to build the ecosystem that supports it.<br /></p>
          115 
          116   <p>He is also a Professor in the <a href=
          117   "http://www.ox.ac.uk/news/2016-10-27-sir-tim-berners-lee-joins-oxfords-department-computer-science">
          118   Computer Science Department at the University of Oxford</a>, UK.
          119   He is President of and founded the <a href=
          120   "https://theodi.org">Open Data Institute</a> in London. He is
          121   President of London's <a href="https://www.odi.org/">Open Data
          122   Institute</a>.</p>
          123 
          124   <p>In 2001 he became a Fellow of the Royal Society. He has been
          125   the recipient of several international awards including the Japan
          126   Prize, the Prince of Asturias Foundation Prize, the Millennium
          127   Technology Prize and Germany's Die Quadriga award. In 2004 he was
          128   knighted by H.M. Queen Elizabeth and in 2007 he was awarded the
          129   Order of Merit. In 2009 he was elected a foreign associate of the
          130   National Academy of Sciences. He is the author of "<a href=
          131   "https://www.w3.org/Weaving/Overview.html">Weaving the Web</a>".</p>
          132 
          133   <p>On March 18 2013, Sir Tim, along with Vinton Cerf, Robert
          134   Kahn, Louis Pouzin and Marc Andreesen, was awarded the <a href=
          135   "http://qeprize.org">Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering</a>
          136   for "ground-breaking innovation in engineering that has been of
          137   global benefit to humanity."</p>
          138 
          139   <p>Sir Tim has promoted open government data globally and spends
          140   time fighting for rights such as net neutrality, privacy and the
          141   openness of the Web.<br /></p>
          142 
          143   <p>On 4 April 2017, Sir Tim was awarded the&nbsp;<a href=
          144   "http://awards.acm.org/about/2016-turing" title=
          145   "turing prize">ACM A.M. Turing Prize</a> for inventing the World
          146   Wide Web, the first web browser, and the fundamental protocols
          147   and algorithms allowing the Web to scale. The Turing Prize,
          148   called the "Nobel Prize of Computing" is considered one of the
          149   most prestigious awards in Computer Science.&nbsp;</p><p>In September 2022, he won the <a href="https://m.koreaherald.com/view.php?ud=20220928000610">Seoul Peace Prize</a> for his work promoting data sovereignty and leading the movement to “decentralize” the web dominated by tech giants.</p>
          150 
          151 <!--
          152 <p><i>For a 350-word bio, add:</i></p>-->
          153 
          154   <p>(<a href="https://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/Longer.html">Longer biography</a>)</p><!--
          155     <h2><a id="Before" name="Before">Before you mail me</a></h2>    <ul>      <li>If you need someone to find something for you about some arbitrary        subject (travel agents, or parakeets or whatever), don't ask me, but try        the <a href="http://vlib.org/">Virtual Library</a> for example, <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Main_Page">wikipedia</a>        or your favorite search engine.</li>      <li>If you want to know how to run a server, or how to edit HTML, check        the <a href="/">W3C web</a> or your local bookstore. I'm sorry I can't        answer individual requests for help.</li>      <li>If you can't access something on <tt>www.w3.org</tt> , you find bad        links from www.w3.org pages, or errors in the hypertext please see the <a          href="../../Help/Webmaster.html">webmaster's documentation</a>..</li>      <li>If you are doing homework or a school project on the history of the        Web then please check my <a href="Kids.html">Kid's questions</a>, or        the more general <a href="FAQ.html">Frequently Asked Questions</a>; and        also, <a href="/Help/">W3C FAQ</a>, or <a href="FAQ.html">my press FAQ</a>        as almost everything I have is there or linked from this page. I am        sorry I cannot help with individual projects.</li>      <li>If you are a member of the press and need clarification or an        interview, please mail <a href="mailto:w3t-pr@w3.org">w3t-pr@w3.org</a>        (and Cc me) with details.</li>      <li>If it is about a possible speaking engagement, see <a href="#Speaking">below</a>.</li>    </ul>    <p>If you have a serious comment on things I have signed, then do email me.      I am also always open to discussion with W3C Advisory Committee      representatives.</p>    <h2>What not to email</h2>    <p>Email is safe unless it contains programs. (Data and documents are fine,      programs are not). If you send me a program, I will not run it, as it      could damage my system and could be a virus.</p>    <ul>      <li>Note: Documents for Microsoft word, Excel, and possibly other Office        programs tend to execute programs (scripts) in what you would expect to        be harmless documents. These can expose my machine to viruses, because        these programs do not (it seems) prevent scripts from running within a        document when it is received by email. Please do not send me Microsoft        Office documents.</li>      <li>If you are sending text, please send it as plain text, HTML, or PDF.        If you use your favorite word process, slide tool, etc, and send it in        that program's format, then you are forcing me install proprietary        software on whatever machine I read them on.</li>      <!==      <li>If your email is sent from Microsoft Outlook, and contains an attachment,      I will be more likely to discard it as I understand that a famous series of      viruses in 2001 resulted from Outlook's tendency to execute scripts in      email, and used up a huge amount of my and my colleague's time.</li>    </ul>    <h2>What you can email</h2>    <ul>      <li>These are all good document standards: Plain text messages, HTML        (sometimes called rich text) pages without scripts, Photos (JPEG files,        PNG, GIF and SVG), PDF, SMIL, RDF/XML, N3 and so on. All these can be        sent as messages or as attachments to messages. I can read them with a        variety of software programs, and they cannot contain viruses, unless        there is a serious bug in the code I use to read them. If you don't need        anything else, then use plain text.</li>    </ul>    <p>These are good rules when emailing anyone.</p>    <p>Please use my full name in the "To" line with my email address, as this      will make your message look less like spam. This will happen automatically      if you have me in your address book. If you just type in my email address,      I probably won't see your mail.</p>    -->
          156 
          157   <h2><a id="Address" name="Address">Contact</a></h2>
          158 
          159   <dl>
          160     <dt>Email:</dt>
          161 
          162     <dd>Chief of Staff <a href=
          163     "mailto:cos@timbl.com">cos@timbl.com</a></dd>
          164 
          165     <dt>PGP fingerprint</dt>
          166 
          167     <dd>4D4B 9D1D C032 0710 3CDC DE0B 344D 9666 1177 9EE7</dd>
          168 
          169     <dt>PGP</dt>
          170 
          171     <dd><a href="https://www.w3.org/1D73DE85.asc">Key</a></dd>
          172 
          173     <dt>Address</dt>
          174 
          175     <dd>W3C/MIT/CSAIL</dd>
          176 
          177     <dd>32 Vassar Street<br />
          178     Cambridge MA 02139<br />
          179     USA</dd>
          180 
          181     <dd><br /></dd>
          182 
          183     <dt>Identity on Wikipedia</dt>
          184 
          185     <dd><a href=
          186     "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Timbl">Timbl</a></dd>
          187   </dl>
          188 
          189   <h2><a id="Talks" name="Talks">Talks, articles, interviews,
          190   etc</a></h2><br />
          191 
          192   <p><b>Videos</b></p>
          193 
          194   <ul>
          195     <li><span force-default-style="" class=
          196     "style-scope ytd-video-primary-info-renderer" style=
          197     "word-break: break-word;">"<a href=
          198     "https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zdyrjxa00DE">The World Wide
          199     Web - A Mid-Course Correction,</a>"</span> The Richard Dimbleby
          200     Lecture, November 2019</li>
          201 
          202     <li><a href=
          203     "https://www.ted.com/talks/tim_berners_lee_a_magna_carta_for_the_web"
          204     title="2014 TED talk">A Magna Carta for the Web</a>, TED talk,
          205     2014</li>
          206 
          207     <li><a href=
          208     "https://www.ted.com/talks/tim_berners_lee_the_year_open_data_went_worldwide"
          209     title="TED talk 2010">The Year Open Data Went Worldwide</a>,
          210     TED talk, 2010</li>
          211 
          212     <li><a href=
          213     "https://www.ted.com/talks/tim_berners_lee_on_the_next_web"
          214     title="2009 TED talk">The Next Web</a>, TED talk, 2009</li>
          215   </ul>
          216 
          217   <p><b>Essays and articles in text form</b></p>
          218 
          219   <ul>
          220     <li><a href=
          221     "https://time.com/5867314/we-need-to-change-how-we-share-our-personal-data-online-in-the-age-of-covid-19/">
          222     We Need to Change How We Share Our Personal Data Online in the
          223     Age of COVID-19</a>, Time magazine, 15 July 2020<br /></li>
          224 
          225     <li><a href=
          226     "https://qz.com/1872591/tim-berners-lee-on-the-future-impacted-by-coronavirus/">
          227     Tim Berners-Lee thinks the world can be better after
          228     Covid-19</a>, Quartz, 30 June 2020<br /></li>
          229 
          230     <li><a href=
          231     "https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2020/jun/04/covid-19-internet-universal-right-lockdown-online">
          232     Covid-19 makes it clearer than ever: access to the internet
          233     should be a universal right</a>, The Guardian, 4 June
          234     2020<br /></li>
          235 
          236     <li><a href=
          237     "https://webfoundation.org/2020/03/web-birthday-31/">Why the
          238     web needs to work for women and girls</a>, The World Wide Web
          239     Foundation, 2020</li>
          240 
          241     <li><a href=
          242     "https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/24/opinion/world-wide-web.html">
          243     I Invented the World Wide Web. Here’s How We Can Fix It</a>,
          244     OpEd, New York Times, 24 November 2019</li>
          245 
          246     <li><a href=
          247     "https://www.wired.com/story/tim-berners-lee-world-wide-web-anniversary/">
          248     Where Does the World Wide Web Go From Here?</a>, Wired, 3
          249     November 2019</li>
          250 
          251     <li><a href=
          252     "https://webfoundation.org/2019/03/web-birthday-30/">30 years
          253     on, what’s next #ForTheWeb?</a>, The World Wide Web Foundation,
          254     2019</li>
          255 
          256     <li><a href=
          257     "https://inrupt.com/blog/one-small-step-for-the-web">One Small
          258     Step for the Web…</a>, Inrupt, November 2018</li>
          259 
          260     <li><a href=
          261     "https://webfoundation.org/2018/03/web-birthday-29/">The web is
          262     under threat. Join us and fight for it</a>, The World Wide Web
          263     Foundation, 2018</li>
          264 
          265     <li><a href=
          266     "http://webfoundation.org/2017/03/web-turns-28-letter/">Three
          267     challenges for the web, according to its inventor</a>, The
          268     World Wide Web Foundation, 2017</li>
          269 
          270     <li><a href=
          271     "http://blog.digital.telefonica.com/2013/10/09/tim-berners-lee-telefonica-open-agenda/">
          272     The many meanings of Open</a>, Telefonica, 2013</li>
          273 
          274     <li><a href=
          275     "https://www.wired.co.uk/article/tim-berners-lee">"Tim
          276     Berners-Lee on the Web at 25: the past, present and
          277     future”</a>, Wired, 23 August 2014<br /></li>
          278 
          279     <li><a href=
          280     "http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=long-live-the-web">
          281     Long Live the Web: A Call for Continued Open Standards and
          282     Neutrality</a> Scientific American Noverber 2010</li>
          283 
          284     <li><a href="2009/Talks/0204-ted-tbl">"Linked Data"
          285     (slides)</a> at the <a href=
          286     "http://conferences.ted.com/TED2009/">TED 2009 conference</a>,
          287     "The Great Unveiling" in Long Beach, CA, USA, 4 February
          288     2009.</li>
          289 
          290     <li><a href=
          291     "http://dig.csail.mit.edu/2007/03/01-ushouse-future-of-the-web.html">
          292     <em>The Future of the Web.</em></a> Testimony before the United
          293     States House of Representatives Committee on Energy and
          294     Commerce Subcommittee on Telecommunications and the Internet.
          295     (2007-03-01)</li>
          296 
          297     <li><a href="2007/Talks/0222-3gsm-tbl/text"><em>The
          298     Mobile Web</em></a> Keynote, 3GSM Barcelona, (2007-02-22)</li>
          299 
          300     <li><a href="2004/Talks/0914-tbl-speech/text"><em>Speech
          301     and the Future</em></a> Keynote, SpeechTek New York,
          302     (2004-09-14)</li>
          303 
          304     <li><a href="/2003/10/27-rogan.html">Comment on the '906
          305     patent</a> (2003)</li>
          306 
          307     <li><a href="2002/04/Japan/Lecture.html">Japan Prize
          308     commemorative lecture</a> on the universality of the Web
          309     (2002)</li>
          310 
          311     <li><a href="https://www.w3.org/2001/MLD">Michael Dertouzos R.I.P.
          312     (2001-08-27)</a></li>
          313 
          314     <li><a href="/1999/07/dms.html">D.M.Sendall. R.I.P. July 15
          315     1999</a></li>
          316 
          317     <li><a href="1999/04/13-tbl.html">The future of the Web -
          318     LCS 35th anniversary talk transcript</a></li>
          319 
          320     <li><a href="https://www.w3.org/UU.html">WWW, UU and I - Unitarian Universalism
          321     and the Web</a> (1998/4)</li>
          322 
          323     <li><a href="https://www.w3.org/ShortHistory.html">A one-page personal history of
          324     the web</a> (1998/5/7)</li>
          325 
          326     <li><a href="1998/02/Potential.html">Realizing the full
          327     potential of the web</a> (1997/12/3)</li>
          328 
          329     <li><em><a href=
          330     "http://delivery.acm.org/10.1145/260000/253704/p57-berners-lee.pdf?key1=253704&amp;key2=2686134711&amp;coll=GUIDE&amp;dl=GUIDE&amp;CFID=13991775&amp;CFTOKEN=52899240">
          331     World-Wide Computer</a></em> Communications of the ACM,
          332     February 1997, Vol. 40 No 2.</li>
          333 
          334     <li><a href="https://www.w3.org/1996/ppf.html">The web: Past, Present and Future
          335     (1996)</a></li>
          336 
          337     <li><a href="https://www.w3.org/1996/EUUS.html">The Web; Europe and the US;
          338     Harmony and Diversity</a> (1996)</li>
          339 
          340     <li><a href="Talks/9510_Bush/Talk.html">Hypertext and Our
          341     Collective Destiny</a> , (1995)</li>
          342 
          343     <li><a href="https://www.w3.org9602affi.html">Presentation to CDA challenge by
          344     CDT et al</a> , 28 Feb 1996</li>
          345 
          346     <li><a href="History/1989/proposal.html">Original
          347     proposal for a global hypertext project at CERN</a> (1989)</li>
          348   </ul>
          349 
          350   <p><b>Interviews:</b></p>
          351 
          352   <ul>
          353     <li><a href=
          354     "https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p08ht9tf">Rethinking Digital
          355     Access</a>, BBC "Rethink" podcast, 24 June 2020<br /></li>
          356 
          357     <li><a href=
          358     "https://www.ft.com/content/343febdc-5573-11ea-abe5-8e03987b7b20">
          359     World wide web founder scales up efforts to reshape
          360     internet</a>, Forbes, 22 February 2020&nbsp;</li>
          361 
          362     <li><a href=
          363     "https://time.com/5549635/tim-berners-lee-interview-web/">The
          364     World Wide Web Turns 30 Today. Here's How Its Inventor Thinks
          365     We Can Fix It</a>, Time Magazine, 12 March 2019</li>
          366 
          367     <li><a href=
          368     "https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2018/07/the-man-who-created-the-world-wide-web-has-some-regrets">
          369     “I was devastated”: Tim Berners-Lee, the man who created the
          370     world wide web, has some regrets</a>, Vanity Fair, 1 July
          371     2018</li>
          372 
          373     <li><a href=
          374     "http://www.nytimes.com/2016/06/08/technology/the-webs-creator-looks-to-reinvent-it.html?_r=1">
          375     "The Web’s Creator Looks to Reinvent It”</a>, New York Times, 7
          376     June 2016</li>
          377 
          378     <li><a href=
          379     "https://techcrunch.com/2016/12/19/putting-data-back-into-the-hands-of-owners/">
          380     "Putting data back into the hands of owners”</a>, TechCrunch,
          381     20 December 2016</li>
          382   </ul>
          383 
          384   <p>If you want to know what we are working on now, look at the
          385   <a href="https://www.w3.org/Overview.html">W3C site</a> and check
          386   out all the activities at W3C. Also see:</p>
          387 
          388   <ul>
          389     <li><a href="https://www.w3.org/DesignIssues"><em>Design
          390     Issues:</em> Technical and philosophical notes on web
          391     architecture</a> An occasional series of notes about how the
          392     web actually works and how to design new technology.</li>
          393 
          394     <li>For a list of past talks, see: <a href=
          395     "http://www.w3.org/2004/08/W3CTalks?date=All+past+and+future+talks+*&amp;event=None&amp;activity1=None&amp;name=Tim+Berners-Lee&amp;country=None&amp;language=None&amp;office=None&amp;sortInverse=yes&amp;submit=Submit">
          396     Presentations</a> via the W3C Presentations system or <a href=
          397     "http://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/Talks.html">an extensive
          398     list</a> in HTML.</li>
          399 
          400     <li><a href=
          401     "https://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/Disclosures.html">Disclosures</a></li>
          402 
          403     <li><a href="https://www.w3.org/History.html">History of the
          404     web: some pointers</a></li>
          405   </ul>
          406 
          407   <h2><a id="Speaking" name="Speaking">Speaking
          408   Engagements</a></h2>
          409 
          410   <p>I do a limited amount of speaking. If you have something you
          411   think I would be interested in speaking at, for academic events
          412   email <a href=
          413   "mailto:timbl+speaking@w3.org">timbl+speaking@w3.org</a> with
          414   details of the event, projected audience size and profile,
          415   location and date.</p>
          416 
          417   <p>My professional speaking is handled by Jana Padula at the
          418           Harry Walker Agency, (<a href="mailto:janap@harrywalker.com">janap@harrywalker.com</a>)&nbsp; (you may also
          419   cc Don Walker <a href=
          420   "mailto:donw@harrywalker.com">donw@harrywalker.com</a> and please
          421   cc me as above).</p>
          422 
          423   <p>Please use an email subject line with relevant information
          424   such as: : "Keynote in Milan, 23 Febrary 2100 at ISWC2100"
          425   including the date and place proposed.</p>
          426 
          427   <h3><a id="Requiremen" name="Requiremen">AV Requirements</a></h3>
          428 
          429   <p>If I use slides (I often do not) I use a laptop -- currently a
          430   Mac running OSX. I do not need audio from the laptop.</p>
          431 
          432   <h2><a id="Press" name="Press">Press: requesting interviews and
          433   materials</a></h2>
          434 
          435   <p>If you need a photo for publication, please complete the
          436   <a href="/2002/09/wbs/1/photo/">W3C photo request form</a>. You
          437   do not need an account to complete the form, but an email address
          438   is required.</p>
          439 
          440   <p>Alternatively, you can ask:</p>
          441 
          442   <ul>
          443     <li>(for information on the beginning of the Web prior to 1994)
          444     The <a href="http://press.cern">press office at CERN</a> (+41
          445     22 767 6111)</li>
          446 
          447     <li><a href="mailto:w3t-pr@w3.org">W3C's Communications
          448     Team</a></li>
          449   </ul>
          450 
          451   <p>If you need an <b>interview</b> for an article, please check
          452   the</p>
          453 
          454   <ul>
          455     <li><a href="/Help/">W3C FAQ</a></li>
          456 
          457     <li><a href="https://www.w3.org/People/Berners-Lee/FAQ.html">my FAQ</a></li>
          458   </ul>
          459 
          460   <p>first, then please use email rather than phone. Please contact
          461   <a href="mailto:w3t-pr@w3.org">w3t-pr@w3.org</a> the general PR
          462   request line at W3C, rather than <a href="mailto:amy@w3.org">Amy
          463   van der Hiel</a> (my assistant) or my Chief of Staff (<a href=
          464   "mailto:cos@timbl.com">cos@timbl.com</a>) or <a href=
          465   "mailto:coralie@w3.org">Coralie Mercier</a> (Head of
          466   Communications at W3C) to set up interviews with me or with other
          467   W3C staff.</p>
          468 
          469   <p>[Photo: in Sheldonian, Oxford: LeFevre communications,
          470   2001.]&nbsp;<br /></p>
          471 
          472   <p><br /></p>
          473 
          474   <p style="text-align: right;"><a href=
          475   "http://accessibility.mit.edu">Accessibility</a> at MIT and at
          476   <a href=
          477   "https://www.w3.org/WAI/fundamentals/accessibility-intro/">W3C</a><br />
          478   </p>
          479   <hr />
          480 
          481   <address>
          482   <p><i>$Id: Overview.html,v 1.233 2023/06/13 12:01:28 coralie Exp $
          483   for timbl</i></p>
          484   </address>
          485 </body>
          486 </html>