The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) was founded in 1994 by
Tim Berners-Lee after he left the European Organization for Nuclear Research (
CERN) in October 1994. It was founded at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
Laboratory for Computer Science with support from the
European Commission, and the
Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, which had pioneered the
ARPANET, the most direct predecessor to the modern
Internet. It was located in
Technology Square until 2004, when it moved, with the MIT Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, to the Stata Center. The organization tries to foster compatibility and agreement among industry members in the adoption of new standards defined by the W3C. Incompatible versions of
HTML are offered by different vendors, causing inconsistency in how web pages are displayed. The consortium tries to get all those vendors to implement a set of core principles and components that are chosen by the consortium. It was originally intended that CERN host the European branch of W3C; however, CERN wished to focus on
particle physics, not
information technology. In April 1995, the
French Institute for Research in Computer Science and Automation became the European host of W3C, with
Keio University Research Institute at
SFC becoming the Asian host in September 1996. Starting in 1997, W3C created regional offices around the world. As of September 2009, it had eighteen World Offices covering Australia, the
Benelux countries (Belgium, Netherlands and Luxembourg), Brazil, China, Finland, Germany, Austria, Greece, Hong Kong, Hungary, India, Israel, Italy, South Korea, Morocco, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, and, as of 2016, the United Kingdom and Ireland. In 2010,
Jeffrey M. Jaffe was named CEO of W3C. He continued in that position until 2022. In October 2012, W3C convened a community of major web players and publishers to establish a
MediaWiki wiki that seeks to document open web standards called the
WebPlatform and WebPlatform Docs. In January 2013,
Beihang University became the Chinese host. In 2022 the W3C WebFonts Working Group won an Emmy Award from the
National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences for standardizing font technology for custom downloadable fonts and typography for web and TV devices. On 1 January 2023, it reformed as a public-interest
501(c)(3) non-profit organization. In October 2023, Seth Dobbs was named as the organization's chief executive officer. ==Specification maturation==