The World Wide Web is a method of interlinked hypertext texts file accessed by means of Internet. With a web browser, one can outlook web pages that can enclose text, pictures, videos, as well as additional multimedia with navigate among them by means of hyperlinks. Using concepts from previous hypertext systems, English physicist Tim Berners-Lee, now the Director of the World Wide Web Consortium, wrote a suggestion in March 1989 for what would finally become the World Wide Web. He was later on joined by Belgian computer scientist Robert Cailliau while both were functioning at CERN in Geneva, Switzerland. In 1990, they planned by means of "HyperText [...] to link as well as access information of different kinds as a web of nodes in which the consumer can browse at will", as well as released that web in month of December.

"The World-Wide Web (W3) was developed to be a collection of human facts, which would enable partner in remote sites to distribute their ideas as well as all aspects of a common project." If two projects are separately formed. Rather than have a central figure make the changes, the two bodies of details can form into one unified piece of work.