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#AboutW3C

Today marks the 30th anniversary of the World Wide Web Consortium, founded by Web inventor @timbl 🎊

We made a 2:27 video using graphic elements and text running on a timeline from 1989 to 2024 to highlight milestones for #W3C and the Internet.

(It is also available on YouTube: youtu.be/0TfUBuIZkmQ )

Version without audio description:


#AboutW3C

Today marks the 30th anniversary of the World Wide Web Consortium, founded by Web inventor @timbl 🎊

We made a 2:27 video using graphic elements and text running on a timeline from 1989 to 2024 to highlight milestones for #W3C and the Internet.

(It is also available on YouTube: youtu.be/AA8EP5UPa-k )

Version with audio description:


Web standards are blueprints –or building blocks– of a consistent and harmonious digitally connected world. They are implemented in browsers, blogs, search engines, and other software that power our experience on the web. #aboutW3C

Learn more at:
w3.org/standards/


📣 We released today the 2024 diversity report, as part of our commitment and continued focus on diversity and inclusion since 2018.

In the report, we focus on gender and geography for several of our governance bodies: the W3C Advisory Board @ab , the W3C Technical Architecture Group @tag , the W3C Board of Directors (BoD), and W3C Management (W3M).

w3.org/about/diversity/diversi…

#diversity #inclusion #aboutW3C
#w3c
#inclusion
#diversity
#webstandards


W3C validators are some of our most popular tools.
Of the top 100 searches and just in the past 3 months, validators and checkers crop up 41 times in many forms, in English, French and even Russian!

See more about our validators and tools at:
w3.org/developers/tools/

#aboutW3C


Did you know, our Nu HTML validator checks:

~3 documents every second
~10,000+ documents every hour
~250,000+ documents a day
~2 million documents a week
~8 million documents a month
~100 million documents a year
~1 billion documents over the last 10 years

validator.w3.org/nu/ #aboutW3C


Curious about W3C? You can find answers to questions such as:

What is the difference between the Web and the Internet?
What does W3C do?
How is W3C organized?
Where is W3C located?
How is W3C funded?
W3C has a validation service. Does W3C approve all web pages?
Why get a W3C account?

and more on our W3C help page:
w3.org/help/ #aboutW3C


W3C offers tools and validators including:

Nu HTML Checker: Checks HTML documents.
Link Checker: Checks web pages for broken links.
Internationalization Checker: Checks level of internationalization
EPUBCheck: Conformance checker for EPUB publications.
CSS Validator: Checks your CSS.
RDF Validator: Checks and visualizes RDF documents.
RSS Feed Validator: Validator for syndicated feeds (RSS and Atom feeds).
#aboutW3C
w3.org/developers/tools/


Want to learn more about W3C work and hear from our experts? We've got videos!

Check out our YouTube channel. #aboutW3C
youtube.com/@W3COfficial/video…


Why W3C web standards?

W3C develops technical specifications according to the W3C Process, which is designed to maximize consensus, ensure quality, earn endorsement and adoption by W3C Members and the broader community.

W3C web standards are optimized for interoperability, security, privacy, web accessibility, and internationalization.

W3C's proven web standards process is based on fairness, openness, royalty-free, we make the web work, for everyone. #aboutW3C

w3.org/standards/


A variety of W3C groups enable W3C to pursue its mission through the creation of Web standards, guidelines, and supporting materials.

Working Groups typically produce deliverables (e.g., standards track technical reports, software, test suites, and reviews of the deliverables of other groups).

The primary goal of an Interest Group is to bring together people who wish to evaluate potential Web technologies and policies. #aboutW3C

w3.org/groups/


W3C does its work in the open. W3C hosts thousands of mailing lists for our group members and the general public to discuss and send feedback on Web standards work at W3C.

The corresponding mailing list archives contain millions of messages dating back to the earliest days of the Web, eg:
lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/w…

Find more about our mailing lists at:
w3.org/email/ #aboutW3C


We are an open forum where diverse voices from around the world and industries come together, incubate and build consensus for global standards for web technologies.

We are socially responsible and committed to ensure that the web is for everyone; we greatly emphasize accessibility, internationalization, privacy, and security.

We are committed to developing open and royalty-free standards with high focus on interoperability and collective empowerment.
#aboutW3C
w3.org/mission/


Did you know? W3C has won several Emmy Awards.

For its work to make online videos more accessible with captions and subtitles, W3C received a 2016 Emmy Award. For its work to standardize a Full TV Experience on the Web, W3C received a 2019 Emmy Award. And for its work standardizing font technology for custom downloadable fonts and typography for web and TV devices, W3C received a 2021 Emmy Award. #aboutW3C

w3.org/about/press-media/#awar…

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