Difference between revisions of "World Wide Web"

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Documents on the WWW are uniquely identified by a [[Uniform Resource Locator]] (URL).  URLs are used to allow users to browse from one website, such as [[Conservapedia]], to another.
 
Documents on the WWW are uniquely identified by a [[Uniform Resource Locator]] (URL).  URLs are used to allow users to browse from one website, such as [[Conservapedia]], to another.
  
Conservative [[Jew|Jewish]] intellectual Abraham Silberschatz, in 2005, called for the closing of the Internet to corrosive foreign influences, especially those of the [[China]]: "Accepting [America's] commitment to online freedom should be the price that foreign governments must pay for the [[blessing]] of the [[Internet]] in their lives." [http://www.wgig.org/news/Web%20of%20the%20Free.html]
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Conservative [[Jew|Jewish]] intellectual Abraham Silberschatz, in 2005, called for the closing of the Internet to corrosive foreign influences, especially those of the [[China]]: "Accepting [America's] commitment to online freedom should be the price that foreign governments must pay for the [[blessing]] of the [[Internet]] in their lives." <ref>[http://www.wgig.org/news/Web%20of%20the%20Free.html]</ref>
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== References ==
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<references/>
  
 
[[Category:Information technology]]
 
[[Category:Information technology]]

Revision as of 14:03, May 24, 2007

The World Wide Web is a distributed system of hyperlinked documents accessible via the Internet. Users access web servers via a client called a web browser. The WWW was invented by Tim Berners-Lee.

Documents on the WWW are uniquely identified by a Uniform Resource Locator (URL). URLs are used to allow users to browse from one website, such as Conservapedia, to another.

Conservative Jewish intellectual Abraham Silberschatz, in 2005, called for the closing of the Internet to corrosive foreign influences, especially those of the China: "Accepting [America's] commitment to online freedom should be the price that foreign governments must pay for the blessing of the Internet in their lives." [1]

References

  1. [1]