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Get involved
There are many ways individuals and organizations can participate in the Web Consortium to advance web standardization.
Participate without W3C Membership
We do not have a class of Membership for individuals but participation by individuals is welcome through review of specifications, discussions, translations and more.
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Public review
Public reviews of specifications are critical to ensuring relevance and quality.
You can help improve the quality of W3C work through reviews of specifications and charters.
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Community Groups
W3C Community and Business Groups are open to all. They give anyone passionate about the Web a place to hold discussions, incubate and publish ideas, and sometimes bring new work to W3C standardization.
These groups are proposed and run by the community.
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Events
Talks, workshops, meetups, endorsed conferences, …
Presentations of W3C work by members of the web community, W3C workshops to discuss new ideas for work, Developer meetups, or conferences we endorse.
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Learn
Mailing lists, blogs, news, training, tutorials, tools, videos, translations, …
W3C uses a number of online tools for work, education, and outreach. The public may learn from curated resources and our online training, or participate in W3C via discussion lists, blogs, translations, and other means.
Community Engagement Support program
68% of the world is now online. We aspire to reflect in our work the multiplicity of skills, expertise, cultures, languages and needs of people around the world, as more people continue to access, use and create the web. We believe that better representation and participation within the W3C community, can lead to web standards that better address user needs, while improving design and functionality for a web that works for everyone.
W3C offers two funding opportunities:
These funds contribute to to W3C stakeholder strategy, as outlined in the 2025-2028 Strategic Objectives and Initiatives and are sponsored by W3C, its Members and participants, as well as non-member organizations that value the work of our Consortium.
Participate as a W3C Member
W3C's processes, in particular the Patent Policy, are designed for organizational participation, therefore participation in the Consortium as an organization makes the most sense.
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Work groups
Working Groups, Interest Groups, Community Groups, Business Groups, and more, …
W3C pursues its mission through the creation of web standards, guidelines, and supporting materials.
Community and Business Groups are open to all and offer ways to discuss and incubate ideas, bring new work to W3C.
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Events
Talks, workshops, membership meetings, Developer meetups, endorsed conferences, …
Presentations of W3C work by members of the web community, W3C workshops to discuss new ideas for work, meetings (e.g., working groups, W3C TPAC), Developer meetups, or conferences we endorse.
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Learn & contribute
Mailing lists, blogs, news, training, tutorials, tools, videos, translations, …
W3C uses a number of online tools for work, education, and outreach. The public may learn from curated resources and our online training, or participate in W3C via discussion lists, blogs, translations, and other means.
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Business ecosystems
The Web Consortium works at the nexus of core technology, industry needs, and societal needs.
Currently, business ecosystems that are particularly impacted by the web include Automotive & Transportation, E-commerce, Media & Entertainment, Network & communications, Publishing, Smart Cities, Web Advertising, Web of Things.