• Not sure if a serious question. So forgive me if your question was meant to be a statement.

      The internet is a large set of computers connected via a set of protocols: IP and on top of that TCP, UDP or very occasionally SCTP (more common on mobile networks).

      There’s 65000-ish ports (channels) available on the internet (IP network).

      The web runs on port 80 and 443 via TCP (mostly).

      The internet supports all sorts of other traffic/channels too: Time synchronisation, games, file transfer, e-mail, remote login, remote desktops etc. None of these run on the web, but is traffic that runs in parallel to the web, using either TCP or UDP protocols.

      The distinction is getting blurrier as lots of traffic that used to be assigned (or simple chose) its own port number is now encapsulated in HTTP(s) traffic. But the distinction is definitely not gone.

    • Think of the Internet as the US Interstate Highway system. The web is a chain of tourist attractions you can visit along those roads.

      The Internet is the physical and logical collection of interconnected networks. The web is a protocol that runs on top of that infrastructure, just as email, ssh, ftp, irc, etc. do.