WWW inventor admits forward slashes ‘a mistake’

Nearly two decades after he invented the World Wide Web, British scientist Sir Tim Berners-Lee has admitted that "forward slashes" in Internet addresses "were a mistake."

October 14, 2009 04:43 pm | Updated December 04, 2021 10:47 pm IST - Washington

Britain's Queen Elizabeth II shakes hands with Sir Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the World Wide Web, before she re-launched the Monarchy website at Buckingham Palace in London on February 12 2009. Sir Tim has admitted that “forward slashes” in Internet addresses “were a mistake.”

Britain's Queen Elizabeth II shakes hands with Sir Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the World Wide Web, before she re-launched the Monarchy website at Buckingham Palace in London on February 12 2009. Sir Tim has admitted that “forward slashes” in Internet addresses “were a mistake.”

Claiming the forward slashes (//) at the front of a Web address was pointless and unnecessary, Sir Tim confessed at a recent talk in the U.S. that at the time of creating the WWW, he had failed to predict how much effect what he was producing would have on people now.

“When I designed the URL, this thing which starts http://, the slash was to indicate we’re actually starting at the top, not starting down at the next slash. Really, if you think about it, it doesn’t need the slashes. I could have designed it not to have the slashes. Boy, now people on the radio are calling it ‘backslash backslash’

“People are having to use that finger so much. Look at all the paper and trees that could have been saved if people had not had to write or type out those slashes on paper over the years — not to mention the human labour and time spent typing those two keystrokes countless millions of times in browser address boxes,” the media quoted him as saying.

He said these while speaking at a symposium organised by Finland’s Technology Academy Foundation, and hosted in the Finnish Embassy in Washington DC, on the future of technology.

Sir Tim invented the Web while working at the CERN particle physics laboratory in Switzerland 20 years ago. In his spare time, he developed a revolutionary idea of linking pages which he named the World Wide Web, and launched the first Website in 1991.

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