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🌐 Discussion: Reclaiming the Web - Tim Berners-Lee

Conversation starter for our knowledge-graph session based on Sir Tim Berners-Lee's conversation with Krishnan Guru-Murthy. We will use the graph to map ideas, tensions, and actions as we talk.

🎯 Quick prep

  • πŸŽ₯ Watch/listen: 40-min podcast video (YouTube link) before the event - Youtube Link
  • πŸ’‘ Bring one insight and one worry you want to map in the graph.
  • 🀝 Expect small-group breakouts (up to 8 people per group).

πŸ”‘ Core themes from the podcast

  • πŸŽ„ The web launched on Christmas Day 1990 and has reshaped how the world learns and connects.
  • 🚫 Engagement-optimized algorithms can be addictive; Sir Tim argues they should be illegal.
  • πŸ€– AI could outsmart humans; governance must keep pace with rapidly evolving systems.
  • βš–οΈ The web is both a force for good and a source of harm; we decide which future wins.
  • πŸ—„οΈ Data sovereignty via Solid "pods" could return control to individuals.
  • 🧠 Coding is modern literacy; AI agents should work for people, not corporations.

πŸ’¬ Discussion questions

  • πŸ‘ Openness: The web began as "for everyone." How do we reclaim openness and collaboration in a platform-dominated internet?
  • πŸ”„ Re-training tech: Algorithms maximize outrage today. What would it take to incentivize constructive, pro-social behavior instead?
  • πŸ“¦ Data pods: If individuals control where data lives and how it is shared, how does that shift power from tech giants to citizens?
  • 🧭 Competition: Monopolies stifle innovation. How do we foster real technological diversity without breaking essential infrastructure?
  • 🌍 Governance: AI is accelerating. What global structures could balance innovation and safety as we race toward artificial superintelligence?
  • 🧩 Literacy and agency: If everyone learned to code and design personal AIs (like Sir Tim's "Charlie"), how would that change what society demands from technology?

πŸ—ΊοΈ Using the graph

  • 🧭 Navigate: Pan/zoom to explore nodes; click a node to see details, links, and related ideas. Use search to jump to people, themes, or actions.
  • 🧰 Layers: Toggle filters to view themes (e.g., openness, governance), stakeholders (citizens, regulators, platforms), or artifacts (links, notes, action items).
  • πŸ“Ž Add context: Attach sources (clips, quotes, links) to nodes so others can verify and build on them.
  • πŸ”— Threads: Use edges to capture relationships (support, tension, dependency) rather than just grouping everything in one blob.

πŸ› οΈ Contributing and issues

  • πŸ“ Create an issue for new questions, missing links, or corrections; include a clear title, short summary, and steps to reproduce any data problems.
  • πŸ“€ When adding to the graph, prefer incremental commits: small, descriptive changes are easier to review.
  • 🏷️ Tag issues with labels like question, data-gap, bug, or enhancement so moderators can triage quickly.
  • πŸ’­ Feel free to propose new node types or views; describe the use case and how it helps the discussion.

πŸš€ Goals for the session

  • πŸ” Map the trade-offs between openness, safety, and innovation.
  • πŸ§ͺ Identify actionable experiments (policy, product, education) that steer the web toward pro-social outcomes.
  • πŸ—‚οΈ Leave with a shared, navigable artifact that anyone can extend after the event.

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Knowledge Graph from the first discussion of the AI Discussion Club

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