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Web inventor warns governments: Internet has no off switch

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LONDON — Tim Berners-Lee, the British inventor of the World Wide Web, on Wednesday warned governments that attempts to block the Internet were doomed to failure due to its scattered structure.

Speaking at the launch of a league table showing which countries use the web most effectively, Berners-Lee said the lack of a global Internet “off-switch” meant authoritarian regimes could not stem the influx of digital information.

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“The way the Internet is designed is very much as a decentralised system,” he explained at the London launch.

“At the moment, because countries connect to each other in lots of different ways, there is no one off switch, there is no central place where you can turn it off.

“In order to be able to turn the whole thing off or really block, suppress one particular idea then the countries and governments would have to get together and agree and co-ordinate and turn it from a decentralised system to being a centralised system.

“And if that does happen it is really important that everybody fights against that sort of direction.”

Sweden came out on top of the global league table, which was calculated by the World Wide Web Foundation using indicators such as the political, economic and social impact of the web, connectivity and use.

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The US came in second, ahead of Britain, Canada and Finland. France came in at 14th place. Yemen ranked bottom, closely followed by Zimbabwe, Burkina Faso and Benin.

Berners-Lee, who was honoured during the London Olympics opening ceremony, launched the first web page on Christmas Day 1990.

He is credited with creating the World Wide Web, which enables users to store and access information via the Internet.

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2020 Election

John Oliver details just how weak Trump’s claim is that he ‘won’ — then he humiliates actor Jon Voight

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"Last Week Tonight" host John Oliver confessed that he didn't want to be talking about the 2020 election again, but there was too much to deal with.

"Instead, we have to talk about this as*hole," said Oliver pointing to a photo of President Donald Trump. Typically, when a president loses, the country moves on, but not in Trump's America.

Oliver found the most disappointing piece of Trump's refusal to let go comes from people like Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. This week he refused to accept the election results, despite, Oliver said, being the guy who's "supposed to denounce coups."

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John Oliver shows 2020 exactly what he thinks of it

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"Last Week Tonight" host John Oliver ended his season Sunday, walking through the horrific things that the world has faced over the past year.

After being verbally spanked by actor Adam Driver for a season-long sexual infatuation laced with linguistic masochism, Oliver walked the audience through his "void" where he's been doing the show.

He explained that he used to do the show in front of a live studio audience, which he said he missed. He also said that he really missed the people he worked with, except three of them.

Typically, at the end of the season, Oliver would finish with big stunts and musical numbers. After a horrible 2016, Oliver lit the year on fire with explosives. This year, in memory of those we lost like Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg, Rep. John Lewis, Kobe Bryant, Chadwick Boseman and more.

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2020 Election

CNN political analyst explains why Democrats won in some red states but not in others

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There were a number of red states that Democrats hoped that they would win either the presidential race or a Senate race, only to lose when Election Day came. But in long-shot states like Arizona and Georgia, Democrats excelled. CNN's senior political analyst Ron Brownstein explained what was different between Arizona and Georgia compared to Iowa and North Carolina.

While Brownstein explained that "Scranton Joe" made some inroads with white non-college-educated voters, it wasn't enough to overcome deficits in states like Iowa and Ohio.

"More significant was their inability to win any state in a Senate race that Trump carried at the presidential level," he continued. "It's a clear message in that if you contrast what happened in Iowa and South Carolina and North Carolina -- states where they spent a fortune on television but ultimately lost the state -- to what happened in Arizona and Georgia where they flipped the state of the presidential level after years of grass-roots organizing, I think there's a clear path forward for Democrats."

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