News

W3C Announces Plans To Launch as Nonprofit Org

Starting in January 2023 the Worldwide Web Consortium (W3C) will be shifting gears and launching as a nonprofit organization

The W3C will be chartered as a nonprofit under U.S. 501(c)(3) legal doctrine. That stipulation will make the W3C a tax-exempt "charitable organization" prohibited from benefitting private interests, according to U.S. Internal Revenue Service language.

The organization, which is well known for creating "Recommendations" that have guided widely adopted Web technologies, such as HTML and CSS, plans to establish bylaws and have a board of directors elected by its members. However, its Recommendations process involving technical reviews by W3C members "large and small" isn't changing with the nonprofit switch.

"The Advisory Board will still guide the community-driven Process Document enhancement," the announcement explained. "The Technical Architecture Group will continue as the highest authority on technical matters."

Also, nothing changes with regard to the W3C's support for open standards and its "royalty-free W3C Patent Policy," the announcement added.

The W3C is making this change to 501(c)(3) nonprofit status to "achieve clearer reporting, accountability, greater diversity and strategic direction, better global coordination," the announcement explained.

Many may have thought that the W3C already was a nonprofit organization. It was really just a consortium of its member host institutions, according to a W3C spokesperson.

"W3C is not a non-profit already," the spokesperson explained. "W3C has been a Consortium of four host institutions; it has not been an independent legal entity."

Those four host institutions include the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Keio University in Japan, the European Research Consortium for Informatics and Mathematics in France and Beihang University in China.

The choice to go with U.S. nonprofit law offered the W3C the best flexibility to continue its global specifications work, the spokesperson added.

The W3C was originally founded in 1994 by Tim Berners-Lee, who is widely credited as the principal "Web inventor." It was conceived as a global consortium to coordinate the various emerging Web standards at the time.

About the Author

Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.

Featured

  • Microsoft Dismantles RedVDS Cybercrime Marketplace Linked to $40M in Phishing Fraud

    In a coordinated action spanning the United States and the United Kingdom, Microsoft’s Digital Crimes Unit (DCU) and international law enforcement collaborators have taken down RedVDS, a subscription based cybercrime platform tied to an estimated $40 million in fraud losses in the U.S. since March 2025.

  • Sound Wave Illustration

    CrowdStrike's Acquisition of SGNL Aims to Strengthen Identity Security

    CrowdStrike signs definitive agreement to purchase SGNL, an identity security specialist, in a deal valued at about $740 million.

  • Microsoft Acquires Osmos, Automating Data Engineering inside Fabric

    In a strategic move to reduce time-consuming manual data preparation, Microsoft has acquired Seattle-based startup Osmos, specializing in agentic AI for data engineering.

  • Linux Foundation Unites Major Tech Firms to Launch Agentic AI Foundation

    The Linux Foundation today announced the creation of a new collaborative initiative — the Agentic AI Foundation (AAIF) — bringing together major AI and cloud players such as Microsoft, OpenAI, Anthropic and other major tech companies.