Twenty years have passed since the web was launched in the public domain on 1993, when the European science agency CERN, where Tim Berners-Lee, the web inventor worked officially, made the W3 software. CERN has launched a project to preserve and recreate the digital assets linked to the web to celebrate the birth of the beneficial invention, the Fox News reports. According to the report, Berners-Lee is an Oxford University graduate whose invention in 1989 has helped develop a technology for sharing global information especially for physicists in universities and institutes across the world. The Director General of CERN Rolf Heuer said that the invention has transformed all sectors of society, from research to business and education, adding that the ways of communication, working, innovating and living has been re-formulated with the web.