Manifesto

Web B

A plan B for the web. Building the web that was always promised but never delivered.

The problem

The web was supposed to be different.

It was built as a shared space: open, distributed, accessible to all. Somewhere knowledge could circulate freely, where anyone could publish, connect, and create.

That space has been captured by a handful of dominant actors. Platform monopolies shape communication. Surveillance-based business models turn attention into revenue. A handful of cloud providers control the infrastructure everyone depends on. They collect data, set the rules, and answer to no one.

This is not an accident. The current web has been reshaped around extraction, control, and dependency. It works exactly as intended, just not for us.

Web B is not a new version of the web. It is a serious attempt to take it back.

Where we came from · where we are · where we go

The web's ages and a different path

Each era of the web arrived with a promise. Each was eventually captured. Web B is not the next version in that sequence. It is a different direction entirely.

Web 1~1990–2004 Web 2~2004–2015 Web 3~2015–2022 Web 4~2022–? Web BNow
Core idea Read: static pages & hyperlinks Read / Write: platforms and user generated content Own? Blockchain, tokens, NFTs AI mediation: agents & models Reclaim: take back the commons
Power Distributed, but shaped by a technical elite Centralised platforms Decentralised in form, speculative in practice Concentrated in AI labs & cloud providers Federated, collectively governed
Who benefits Early adopters & technologists Platforms & advertisers Speculators & insiders Infrastructure owners & AI companies Communities & participants
Data Minimal, open Extracted & monetised On-chain, still opaque Fed to models, controlled by few Governed by individuals & communities. Models trained on community-consented data.
Infrastructure Open protocols: HTTP, HTML Proprietary platforms & APIs New chains, same silos Hyperscaler clouds & closed models Open standards & federated nodes
Governance Technical bodies: W3C, IETF Corporate ToS & algorithms DAO theatre, plutocratic voting Opaque model policies Local, subsidiarity-based, and transparent
The user is… A reader A product A speculator A prompt & a data point A participant & co-steward

← Scroll to see all columns on small screens

Web 1 ~1990–2004
Core idea Read: static pages & hyperlinks
Power Distributed, but shaped by a technical elite
Who benefits Early adopters & technologists
Data Minimal, open
Infrastructure Open protocols: HTTP, HTML
Governance Technical bodies: W3C, IETF
The user is A reader
Web 2 ~2004–2015
Core idea Read / Write: platforms and user generated content
Power Centralised platforms
Who benefits Platforms & advertisers
Data Extracted & monetised
Infrastructure Proprietary platforms & APIs
Governance Corporate ToS & algorithms
The user is A product
Web 3 ~2015–2022
Core idea Own? Blockchain, tokens, NFTs
Power Decentralised in form, speculative in practice
Who benefits Speculators & insiders
Data On-chain, still opaque
Infrastructure New chains, same silos
Governance DAO theatre, plutocratic voting
The user is A speculator
Web 4 ~2022–?
Core idea AI mediation: agents & models
Power Concentrated in AI labs & cloud providers
Who benefits Infrastructure owners & AI companies
Data Fed to models, controlled by few
Infrastructure Hyperscaler clouds & closed models
Governance Opaque model policies
The user is A prompt & a data point
Web B Now
Core idea Reclaim: take back the commons
Power Federated, collectively governed
Who benefits Communities & participants
Data Governed by individuals & communities. Models trained on community-consented data.
Infrastructure Open standards & federated nodes
Governance Local, subsidiarity-based, and transparent
The user is A participant & co-steward

Seven commitments

Our principles

  1. The web as a commons

    The web is a shared resource, built on decades of collective work and conceived from the start as an open system. Its protocols, code, and physical infrastructure must be collectively maintained and protected from privatisation. No actor should be able to enclose what belongs to all: not a platform, not a cloud provider, not even a well-intentioned government.

  2. Federation over centralisation

    No single platform should dominate communication or access. Web B is built on interconnected nodes: communities, organisations, individuals. Each is autonomous. Together they cooperate. Decentralisation, as Berners-Lee argued from the start, is what keeps any system from collapsing into a single point of control.

  3. Protocols, not platforms

    The foundations of the web must be open standards, not proprietary ecosystems. Anyone can build on them. Open protocols reduce lock-in and make exit possible. This is not a technical preference but a political one: open protocols distribute power, and closed platforms concentrate it. The Contract for the Web exists precisely because that distinction needs defending.

  4. Data belongs to people, and to communities

    Personal data is not a commodity. People must be able to control what is collected about them, how it is used, and who can access it. But data is also collective. Communities should be able to govern shared data as a commons, through stewardship models that go beyond individual consent.

  5. Subsidiarity by design (decisions made at the most local level possible)

    Decisions should be made as close as possible to those affected. Local communities govern their digital spaces. Coordination happens only when necessary. This is what Elinor Ostrom showed through decades of fieldwork: communities can govern shared resources effectively without central control, provided the rules emerge from those who live by them.

  6. Transparency and accountability

    Governance must be explicit and enforceable. Communities set their own moderation rules. Federated nodes coordinate through open, negotiated agreements. Algorithms and policies are visible and contestable. Trust comes from openness, not promises.

  7. Resilience over scale

    Scale for its own sake is not the point. Web B favours smaller, distributed systems over monolithic platforms, local hosting over dependence on single providers, infrastructure sized for communities rather than for markets. This is not a new idea: Small is Beautiful, E.F. Schumacher's argument for human-scale systems, made it half a century ago.

What must change

The shifts

  • Users Participants

    People are not reduced to consumers or products, but have real agency over how they use, shape, and leave digital spaces.

  • Platforms Protocols

    Services are built on open standards anyone can use, not controlled environments that lock people in.

  • Extraction Stewardship

    Data and value are governed responsibly for the benefit of individuals and communities, not extracted for profit.

  • Dependency Autonomy

    Individuals and communities can operate and move freely without reliance on dominant providers.

This is not only a digital issue. The web shapes how democracies function, how knowledge spreads, how attention and culture are produced. What happens here matters far beyond the screen.

Two things need to happen at once: building alternatives, and changing the rules. Federated tools, open protocols, community infrastructure. But also law, public procurement, standards bodies. One without the other is not enough.

A call to action

Start where you are. Build from there.

The tools already exist: federated social networks, community-controlled infrastructure, open-source stacks, data cooperatives, public interest technology. The work is to connect what exists, grow it through federation, and defend it. The barriers are real, switching costs, network effects, lack of resources, but they are not insurmountable when people act together.

  • Explore and create on the open web. Find content that exists outside the platforms: personal sites, community spaces, federated networks. And put something of your own there too. Presence is the first act of reclamation.

  • Use federated tools. Choose services where you are a user, not a product. Paying for something is sometimes the most radical choice you can make. Stop feeding the monopolies you have alternatives to.

  • Form local groups and cooperatives. Pool resources. Build infrastructure your community actually controls.

  • Push institutions, schools, cities, public services, to adopt open standards and stop depending on proprietary platforms.

  • Connect with others doing the same. Local initiatives become stronger when they federate.

The web we choose

The web as we knew it has been captured. Web B is the deliberate choice to take it back.

Not to replace the web, but to reclaim and rebuild what was always meant to be ours.

The web is dead. Long live the web.