In the very near future the way that we browse the internet will be radically different than that of today. When the non-Latin based characters come online it will turn into Armageddon for hundreds of millions of people. Next year, the first URLs made up of non-Latin characters will appear on the internet.
The Domain Name System, which performs a lookup service to translate user-friendly names into network addresses for locating Internet resources, is restricted to the use of ASCII characters, a technical limitation that initially set the standard for acceptable domain names. Examples of countries who use non-ASCII characters or do not use Latin based script are Arabic, Hangul, Hiragana and Kanji. ICANN expects that Arabic, Chinese, and Russian domains are likely to be the first implementations.
A spokesperson for Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) stated, "The first national domains, counterparts of .uk or .au, should go live in early 2010. So far, 12 nations, using six different scripts, have applied and some have proudly revealed their desired TLD and given a preview of what the future web will look like."
The brain is made of millions of cells and the neurons are the tool that allows the different parts of the brain to communicate with one another. Just like the internet it is made of many different people and from many different places around the world. People are like neurons that communicate via the internet, If the transmissions is severed or in this case each culture will create their new unique system which will create non-interacting web which the world wide web will be lost.