</br>
<i class="glyphicon glyphicon-road"></i>: <span class="lptrack lptrack12">Keynote</span>
</div>
-<div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">Thirty years after the World Wide Web was created, can we now make it<br />\r
-better? How can we ensure that our most important values: privacy, free<br />\r
-speech, and free access to knowledge are enshrined in the code itself? <br />\r
-In a provocative call to action, entrepreneur and Open Internet<br />\r
-advocate, Brewster Kahle, challenges us to build a better, decentralized<br />\r
-Web based on new distributed technologies. Website content and code<br />\r
-could be served peer-to-peer, with decentralized psuedonomous identity,<br />\r
-and even payment models. What a world it could be.<br />\r
-<br />\r
-He lays out a path to creating a new Web that is reliable, private, but<br />\r
-still fun—in order to lock the Web open for good.</div></div>
+<div class="abstract"><div class="webform-long-answer">Thirty years after the World Wide Web was created, can we now make it better? How can we ensure that our most important values: privacy, free speech, and free access to knowledge are enshrined in the code itself? In a provocative call to action, entrepreneur and Open Internet advocate, Brewster Kahle, challenges us to build a better, decentralized Web based on new distributed technologies. Website content and code could be served peer-to-peer, with decentralized psuedonomous identity, and even payment models. What a world it could be.<br />\r
+<br />\r
+He lays out a path to creating a new Web that is reliable, private, but still fun—in order to lock the Web open for good.</div></div>
</div>
<div class="speakerblock">