Proton
Sir Tim Berners-Lee

We are proud and humbled to announce that Sir Tim Berners-Lee, a fellow former scientist from the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) and the inventor of the World Wide Web, will be joining Proton’s advisory board.

Our vision is to build an internet where privacy is the default by creating an ecosystem of services accessible to everyone, everywhere, every day. It is what drives everything we do, from our development of transparent and encrypted services to our advocacy for better data protection laws.

Our products provide a viable choice so that people don’t have to compromise their privacy on the internet. Our first product, Proton Mail, is now the world’s largest encrypted email service, and subsequent products, such as Proton VPN(nova janela), Proton Calendar(nova janela), and Proton Drive(nova janela), leverage the same advanced encryption that gives our users a choice over how and with whom their data is shared.

The desire to create an internet that serves the interests of all people is shared by Sir Tim, who has worked for over 30 years to make the web safer, empowering, and truly for everyone. After inventing the World Wide Web in 1989, Sir Tim founded the World Wide Web Consortium(nova janela) in 1994 to ensure accessible, international, private, and secure web standards. More recently, through his work with the World Wide Web Foundation(nova janela), which he co-founded in 2009, and its Contract for the Web(nova janela), Sir Tim has advocated for the establishment of universal internet data protections and greater internet accessibility.

Having Sir Tim join our advisory board is a nod to our shared past at CERN, where we conceived the initial idea for Proton Mail, and our future. When Sir Tim invented the World Wide Web, he created a new medium through which people could connect with each other. It changed the world. We have a similarly audacious goal: We want to create an internet where people are in control of their information at all times. This makes Sir Tim uniquely suited to understanding Proton and advising us as we try to realize this ambitious vision.

“I’m delighted to join Proton’s advisory board and support Proton on their journey. I am a firm supporter of privacy, and Proton’s values to give people control of their data are closely aligned to my vision of the web at its full potential,” said Sir Tim.

Over 50 million people worldwide have signed up for Proton to secure their information and give them control over who can access it. With Sir Tim’s input and advice, Proton looks forward to taking the next step and truly creating an internet where privacy is the default for everyone, everywhere.

Artigos relacionados

The cover image for a Proton Pass blog comparing SAML and OAuth as protocols for business protection
en
SAML and OAuth help your workers access your network securely, but what's the difference? Here's what you need to know.
Proton Lifetime Fundraiser 7th edition
en
Learn how to join our 2024 Lifetime Account Charity Fundraiser, your chance to win our most exclusive plan and fight for a better internet.
The cover image for a Proton Pass blog about zero trust security showing a dial marked 'zero trust' turned all the way to the right
en
Cybersecurity for businesses is harder than ever: find out how zero trust security can prevent data breaches within your business.
How to protect your inbox from an email extractor
en
  • Guias de privacidade
Learn how an email extractor works, why your email address is valuable, how to protect your inbox, and what to do if your email address is exposed.
How to whitelist an email address and keep important messages in your inbox
en
Find out what email whitelisting is, why it’s useful, how to whitelist email addresses on different platforms, and how Proton Mail can help.
The cover image for Proton blog about cyberthreats businesses will face in 2025, showing a webpage, a mask, and an error message hanging on a fishing hook
en
Thousands of businesses of all sizes were impacted by cybercrime in 2024. Here are the top cybersecurity threats we expect companies to face in 2025—and how Proton Pass can protect your business.