It was on April 30, 1993 the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN), would be free to anyone.

CERN was where Tim Berners-Lee worked when, according to a Wikipedia entry, he published a formal proposal in 1990 to create a project that would build a web of hypertext-linked documents viewed by a browser. He later left to help form the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), where he is now director.
Although work was done on the Web in the previous three years, 1993 was a seminal year thanks to the release of the Mosaic browser, which allowed graphics to be viewed along with text.
Today, itโs hard to think of something that doesnโt connect to the Web โ if it doesnโt already (refrigerators and vending machines) there are plans to make it so.
But Louis wonders if after two decades there are forces mounting that may smother the openness of the Web, including the W3C considering whether digital rights management can be added to HTML.