Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Since its founding in 1989, the World Wide Web has touched the lives of billions of people around the
world and fundamentally changed how we connect with others, the nature of our work, how we
discover and share news and new ideas, how we entertain ourselves and how communities form and
function.
The timeline below is the beginning of an effort to capture both the major milestones and small
moments that have shaped the Web since 1989. It is a living document that we will update with your
contributions. To suggest an item to add to the timeline, please message us.
1989
original-proposalThe World Wide Web begins as a CERN (European Organization for Nuclear Research)
project called ENQUIRE, initiated by British scientist Tim Berners-Lee. Other names considered for the
project include “The Information Mesh” and “The Mine of Information.”
AOL launches its Instant Messenger chat service and begins welcoming users with the iconic greeting
“>”You’ve got mail!”
1990
800px-First_Web_Server
World’s first website and server go live at CERN, running on Tim Berners-Lee’s NeXT computer, which
bears the message “This machine is a server. DO NOT POWER DOWN!”
Archie, the first tool to search the internet is developed by McGill University student Alan Emtage.
1991
xcoffeeResearchers rig up a live shot of a coffee pot so they could tell from their computer screens when
a fresh pot had been brewed. Later connected to the World Wide Web, it becomes the first webcam.
1992
LHC5
Tim Berners-Lee posts the first photo, of the band “Les Horribles Cernettes,” on the Web.
The line-mode browser launches. It is the first readily accessible browser for the World Wide Web.
1993
CERN places its World Wide Web technology in the public domain, donating it to the world.
The National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) releases Mosaic 1.0, the first web browser
to become popular with the general public. “The web as we know it begins to flourish,” Wired later
writes.
The New York Times writes about the Web browser Mosaic and the World Wide Web for the first time.
“Think of it as a map to the buried treasures of the Information Age.”
Marc Andreessen proposes the IMG HTML tag to allow the display of images on the Web.
1994
11 million American households are “equipped to ride the information superhighway.”
pizzanetOne of the first known Web purchases takes place: a pepperoni pizza with mushrooms and
extra cheese from Pizza Hut.
Yahoo! is created by Stanford University graduate students Jerry Yang and David Filo. They originally
named the site “Jerry and David’s Guide to the World Wide Web.”
first-bannerThe first banner ad for hotwired.com appears, with the text “Have you ever clicked your
mouse right HERE? —> YOU WILL.”
Two lawyers post the first massive, commercial spam message with the subject “Green Card Lottery
-Final One?”
1995
18 million American homes are now online, but only 3% of online users have ever signed on to the
World Wide Web.
amazonAmazon.com opens for business, billing itself as the “Earth’s Biggest Bookstore.”
Craig Newmark starts craigslist, originally an email list of San Francisco events.
Entrepreneur Pierre Omidyar launches eBay, originally named “AuctionWeb.” He lists the first item for
sale: a broken laser pointer. A collector purchases it for $14.83.
Chris Lamprecht becomes the first person to be banned from the internet by judicial decree. “I told the
judge computers were my life,” Lamprecht later recalled.
Netscape IPO starts the gold rush mentality for Web startups.
1996
77% of online users send or receive e-mail at least once every few weeks, up from 65% in 1995.
nokia-9000iNokia releases the Nokia 9000 Communicator, the first cellphone with internet capabilities.
HoTMaiL launches as one of the world’s first Webmail services, its name a reference to the HTML
internet language used to build webpages.
The Dancing Baby, a 3D animation, becomes one of the first viral videos.
1997
Millions “visit Mars – on the internet” – the Jet Propulsion Lab allows people to watch the Sojourner
rover landing and exploration of Mars. The broadcast generates about 40 million to 45 million hits each
day.pathfinder_internet
Jorn Barger becomes the first person to use the term “Weblog” to describe the list of links on his
website.
1998
aol_old_cdrom_12281020% of Americans get news from the internet at least once a week, up from 4%
in 1995.
AOL launches AOL 4.0 and inundates American homes with CD-ROM mailers. AOL membership jumps
from 8 million to 16 million members.
The Internet Corporations for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) takes over responsibility for the
coordination of the global internet’s systems of unique identifiers.
1999
41% of adults are using the internet and the weather is the most popular online news attraction.300px-
Napster_corporate_logo.svg
MP3 downloading service Napster launches, overloading high-speed networks in college dormitories.
Many colleges ban the service and it is later shut down for enabling the illegal sharing of music files.
2000
43% of internet users say they would miss going online “a lot,” up from 32% in 1995.
78% of internet users who download music don’t think it’s stealing to save music files to their computer
hard drives.
Nasdaq2
The NASDAQ spiked in the late 90s and then fell sharply.
The NASDAQ hits a record high of 5,048, before plunging by 78% during the dot com bust. A 2001 survey
finds 71% of Americans who had heard about the dot com troubles believe a major cause of the dot-
com woes is that investors were eager to make a lot of money and took at lot of risks.
AOL acquires Time Warner for $165 billion. New York Times says “it could be the internet companies
that do the buying and the old media that sell out.”
2001
Only 3% of internet users say they got most of their information about the 9/11 attacks and the
aftermath from the internet.
Jimmy Wales launches Wikipedia. Users write over 20,000 encyclopedia entries in the first year.
2002
55 million people now go online from work and 44% of those who have internet access at work say their
use of the internet helps them do their jobs.
Screenshot by Wired
Screenshot by Wired
Microsoft launches Xbox Live, its online multiplayer gaming service.”Critics scoffed at the idea, noting
how uncommon broadband connections were at the time.”
2003
Credit: CNET
Credit: CNET
Apple launches the iTunes Music Store with 200,000 songs at 99¢ each. The store sells one million songs
in its first week.
Skype, a voice-over-IP calling and instant messaging service, launches and quickly becomes a verb, as in
“Skype me.”
President George W. Bush signs the CAN-SPAM Act into law, establishing the first national standards for
the sending of commercial email.
2004
11% of American internet users follow the returns on election night online. One-in-ten internet users
sign up for political email newsletters and news alerts during the campaign.
ThefacebookHarvard student Mark Zuckerberg launches thefacebook.com. 1,200 Harvard students sign
up within the first 24 hours. Facebook goes on to become the world’s biggest social networking site,
with over a billion users worldwide.
Social news website Digg launches. Digg users vote to “digg up” links that they like and “bury” down
those they don’t.
2005
8% of adult American internet users say they participate in sports fantasy leagues online.
9% of internet users (13 million Americans) went online to donate money to the victims of Gulf Coast
hurricanes Katrina and Rita.
About one-in-six online adults – 25 million people – have sold something online.
Community news site Reddit is founded. It is bought by Conde Nast a year later for $20 million.
Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp. buys MySpace for $580 million and sells it in 2011 for $35 million.
“>first video, an explanation of what’s cool about elephants, is uploaded by co-founder Jawed Karim on
April 23. Google acquires the company a year later.
2006
The late Senator Ted Stevens describes the internet as “a series of tubes,” during a 2006 speech on net
neutrality. His quote is mocked by Boing Boing and the Daily Show and inspires YouTube remixes.
Google acquires YouTube for $1.65 billion. YouTube founders Chad and Steve announce the Google
acquisition in a
“>video recorded in a parking lot: “The king of search and the king of video have gotten together.”
Twitter launches. Founder Jack Dorsey sends the first tweet: “just setting up my twttr”
2007
“>Hillary and Bill Clinton’s video parody of the final episode of “The Sopranos” and 19% have actually
seen it.
36% of Americans say they would have a hard time giving up their Blackberry or other wireless email
device, up from 6% in 2002.
IMG_2298Apple releases its first iPhone, priced at $499 for 4GB and $599 for 8G.
Estonia becomes the world’s first country to use internet voting in a parliamentary election.
2008
Three-quarters (74%) of internet users – or 55% of the entire U.S. adult population — say they went
online during the presidential election to take part in or get news and information about the campaign.
19% of cellphone owners say they have gone online with their phones.
HTML5 is introduced.
Microsoft offers to buy Yahoo! for $44.6 billion, but the two companies cannot agree on a purchase
price.
World of Warcraft hits 11.5 million subscribers worldwide. Guinness Book of World Records names it the
most popular MMORPG.
2009
69% of Americans turn to the internet to cope with and understand the recession.
Twitter raises $98 million from investors, valuing the company at a whopping $1 billion.
The Web is transfixed by the tale of a six-year-old boy flying over Colorado in a weather balloon. The
story later proves to be a hoax.
“>Baby Dancing to Beyonce, and the JK Wedding Entrance Dance launch ordinary people into newfound
Web stardom.
2010
35% of adults have cell phones with apps, but only two-thirds actually use them.
Wikileaks collaborates with major media organizations to release U.S. diplomatic cables.
2011
15% of social media-using teens say they have been the target of online meanness.
68% of all Americans say the internet has had a major impact on the ability of groups to communicate
with members.
Google+ launches.
Young Egyptians use the hashtags #Egypt and #Jan25 on Twitter to spread the word about the Egyptian
Revolution. The government responds by shutting down the internet.
Rebecca Black’s “
2012
Facebook reaches 1 billion monthly active users, making it the dominant social network worldwide.
Some analysts start calling it “Facebookistan.” The company buys Instagram for $1 billion and debuts on
NASDAQ at $38 a share.
&feature=kp”>Baby” as the most viewed video ever, with over 800 million views.
The Internet Society founds the Internet Hall of Fame to “celebrate people who bring the internet to
life.”
2013
Former CIA employee and NSA contractor Edward Snowden turns over thousands of classified
documents to media organizations, exposing a top-secret government data surveillance program.
Apple says app store downloads top 40 billion, with 20 billion in 2012 alone.
Twitter files for its long-awaited IPO. Shares soar 73% above their IPO price of $26 a share on the first
day of trading.
2014
45% of internet users ages 18-29 in serious relationships say the internet has had an impact on their
relationship.