WebSci and SIGWEB are pleased to announce the availability of a fund to help support attendance to WebSci 2023 in Austin, TX, USA . Travel Grants WebSci’23 travel grants provide support up to $1,500 for students, early career scholars and other...
This year WebSci’23 is co-located with The Web Conference, with both taking place in Austin, Texas. WebSci’23 will take place on Sunday, April 30 and Monday, May 01 . To participate in the WebSci’23 conference, you may choose to either register for...
We are excited to announce 27 accepted tutorials at #TheWebConf 2023 . The conference will take place in Texas, USA on April 30 - May 4 2023. See the complete list with teaser videos at https://www2023.thewebconf.org/program/tutorials/ . Internet...
The conference will take place in Texas, USA on April 30 - May 4 2023 . The following calls for contributions still open for submissions, as well as the list of upcoming workshops and tutorials. Call for Papers for The Creative Web Special Track...
We invite the research community to submit nominations for the Seoul Test of Time Award, which will be presented at The ACM Web Conference 2023 in April-May 2023 in Austin, Texas. The award will be given to a paper that has been published in The...
The WebConf Steering Committee (SC) hereby invites eligible proposals to host the annual 2026 ACM Web Conference (TheWebConf 2026). The conference typically takes place in April of each year, but organizers have some flexibility in the proposed...
Since the invention of the World Wide Web in 1989, The Web Conference (formerly known as International World Wide Web Conference, abbreviated as WWW) is a yearly international academic conference on the topic of the future direction of the World Wide Web. This conference has been the premier venue to present and discuss progress in research, development, standards, and applications of the topics related to the Web. Over the past three decades, The Web Conference has been the forum where some of the most fundamental Web technologies have been introduced, such as the Anatomy of a Large Scale Web Search Engine in 1998 prefiguring Google, the EigenTrust algorithm in 2003 and the YAGO knowledge base in 2007. The conference assembles scholars, researchers, policymakers, practitioners, and end-users with one unifying goal: to envision and create the future of the Web.