Back to Show
PBS NewsHour
25 years on, still adapting to life tangled up by the Web
Twenty-five years have passed since a paper first introduced the concept of the World Wide Web. How do Americans think about the Internet and its impact on their lives? Jeffrey Brown talks to three people who have observed the growth of online life from different angles: Xeni Jardin of Boing Boing, Catherine Steiner-Adair of the Harvard Medical School and Daniel Weitzner from MIT.
Support Provided By
Season
26:45
May 11, 2024 - PBS News Weekend full episode
57:46
May 10, 2024 - PBS NewsHour full episode
57:46
May 9, 2024 - PBS NewsHour full episode
57:46
May 8, 2024 - PBS NewsHour full episode
57:46
May 7, 2024 - PBS NewsHour full episode
57:46
May 6, 2024 - PBS NewsHour full episode
26:45
A look at how students and administrators at some colleges are diffusing tensions over pro-Palestinian demonstrations.
26:44
What the Biden administration’s expansion of health care privacy means for people seeking abortions.
57:46
The Department of Justice and Google make closing arguments in a landmark trial that could change how we use the internet.
57:46
Police forcefully break up the UCLA encampment as arrests and protests against the war in Gaza spread to more college campuses.
56:44
Police clear an occupied building at Columbia University and violence erupts at UCLA as campus protests over the war in Gaza intensify.
57:46
Students occupy a Columbia University building as protests against the war in Gaza spread to more college campuses.