KEY POINTS
  • Robert Blumofe, chief technology officer of web security firm Akamai, thinks that if we were to fall asleep today and not wake up for another 35 years, we'd likely wake up "wildly disappointed" by the progress of the web.
  • Blumofe compared the current state of the web today to the aerospace industry in the 1960s; back then, he said, there was huge innovation with the arrival of the Boeing 747 and the first moon landing, he says — but today, innovation has stalled.
  • Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the World Wide Web, told CNBC ahead of the World Wide Web's 35th anniversary this week he thinks we're likely to get personal AI assistants and greater ownership of our data on the web in the future.
Astronaut Edwin E. Aldrin, Jr., the lunar module pilot of the first lunar landing mission, stands next to a United States flag July 20, 1969 during an Apollo 11 Extravehicular Activity (EVA) on the surface of the Moon.

If we were to fall asleep today and not wake up for another 35 years, we'd wake up feeling underwhelmed at the pace of innovation.

That's according to Robert Blumofe, chief technology officer of web security firm Akamai, who thinks the world may be "wildly disappointed" by progress made on the web in the next three decades.