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A beginners guide to Web 3.0 and what makes it so exciting

web 3.0

In the past year, I have become a little obsessed with Web 3.0. The pace of growth is so fast that changes take place daily.

People worldwide are pivoting careers. The most talented professionals join the decentralised web movement because of a) their ideology and b) the underlying technology.

While Web 2.0 and software as we know it are still eating the world and bearing fruit, we are at the threshold of the following significant paradigm shift in internet applications– Web 3.0.

It isn’t easy for non-tech folks like me to understand the impact Web 3.0 will have. I spent a lot of time reading and following intelligent people to start understanding the basics.

I will be writing a series of essays on the topic to accelerate my learning. Hopefully, helping other people understand what’s going on, too—starting with this one.

Web 1.0

In Web 1.0, we discovered the internet through dial-up modems, which helped us access static web pages. By today’s standards, Web 1.0 was a laughable experience.

I still remember how during my childhood, an average movie took three days to download. The internet was slow, expensive, and had a terrible user experience.

Also Read: Creating a trusted internet with augmented whitelisting

Yet, the fact that we could share information so easily with pretty much the entire world had an incredible impact on our progress. Before the internet, we relied on printed books. We could spread information only at the speed of physical distribution.

Access to information was slow, gated, and not even possible in some parts of the world. For example, growing up in the suburbs of Bulgaria’s capital city Sofia, I had access only to three sources of information a) books at home, b) what the local school forced me to study, c) the two libraries in my neighbourhood.

With the arrival of Web 1.0, information exchange became possible like never before. I could download books and content from all over the world, which had a lasting impact on my life. In turn, the access to more and better content led me to make some contrarian choices at the time.

While my family’s expectations boiled down to getting a stable job, I moved abroad for studies. Then I travelled half the world, even though I never met anyone who travelled to that extent in my childhood. Later, I was the first person ever to start a business in my family.

Making such choices and reaping the benefits that followed would not have been possible without access to a wide variety of content written by other like-minded people.

“The ”World Wide Web” was just a set of static websites with a load of information and no interactive content. It was connecting meant dialling up through rickety modems and blocking anyone in the house from using the phone.

“It was the web of AOL chat rooms and MSN messenger, of AltaVista and AAskedJeeves. It was maddeningly slow. Streaming videos and music? Forget it. Downloading a song would take at least a day.”

In 2021, the memory of slow internet and crappy static websites has gradually faded away. We have come a long way since. Today, we refer to the internet as Web 2.0.

Web 2.0

Web 2.0 is everything we take for granted, like faster internet speed, interactive content, social, mobile, cloud, and user-generated content.

Also Read: Tackling misinformation and creating a safer internet through blockchain amidst Asia’s lockdowns

Some argue that the rise of Web 2.0 was driven by three core innovations: mobile, social, and cloud.

The iPhone in 2007 enabled mobile internet access on the go. We moved from using the internet for just a few hours a day to an “always connected” mode. Our phones gave us access to web browsers and mobile apps throughout the day.

In ~2004, companies such as Friendster, MySpace, Facebook, and LinkedIn transformed brought the next wave of innovations. Changing the internet from a dark and anonymous place to what it is today.

Social networks encourage good user behaviour. In the process, such platforms enabled content generation, recommendations, referrals and connected the world.

Last but not least, web 2.0 brought the cloud. The rise of cloud computing decreased the costs of starting new businesses considerably. Suddenly entrepreneurs did not need to invest heavily into servers, hardware, and maintenance.

Instead, companies such as AWS launched data centres worldwide. They allowed businesses to shift from buying and maintaining their infrastructure to renting storage, computing power, and other relevant resources at low costs.

In turn, the lower costs of starting a business unleashed innovation like never before. Simply put, Web 2.0 enabled founders to build prototypes and run experiments while keeping the costs down.

The decrease in the cost of launching a Startup from 1999–2010, Mark Suster

Thanks to all that innovation, more and more people have joined the internet. The UN estimated that internet users have increased from 1.1 billion to 4 billion between 2005 and 2019.

Also Read: New-age internet platforms are breeding grounds for financial crimes. Here’s how to tackle them

​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ITU estimates that at the end of 2019, a bit more than 51 per cent of the global population, or 4 billion people, are using the internet.​​​

In the process, we generated data like never before in human history. Companies realised how personal information has immense value.

Big tech brands such as Amazon, Facebook, Twitter, Google started collecting all that information. Everyone’s identities, browsing habits, searches, and online shopping information were sold to whoever could pay the most.

Web 2.0 was all about improving the experience of browsing the internet, which resulted in the centralisation of data, abundant connectivity, and new opportunities. While that was great for education and wealth creation, some downsides were inevitable.

The most significant problem is consolidating too much power in the hands of big tech companies, which leads to giving up on privacy. So this begs the question, how will the web adapt, and what’s next?

Web 3.0

The next wave of the internet will be all about decentralisation and privacy. Everyone’s information will be returned.

Also Read: What is web 3.0 and why should you care?

Web 2.0 centralised all the data in the hands of a few large organisations with questionable motives. Web 3.0 is working towards decentralising information and bringing back privacy.

Web 3.0 boils down to a few core concepts: open, trustless, and permissionless networks.

  • Open: web 3.0 is built on the blockchain, most often from open-source software by a community that operates transparently.
  • Trustless: because there is no need for third parties to interfere. They are eliminating slow transactions and higher rates because of the third-party cuts. The blockchain enables participants to interact publicly or privately through intelligent contracts.
  • Permissionless: as there is no need for authorisation from governing bodies.

While Web 2.0 democratised many power structures and created new opportunities, the economic engine is primarily privatised and monopolised. Facebook, Uber and Airbnb have made private networks for public infrastructure, which they dominate.

Web 3.0 is the antithesis of this; it’s’ about multiple profit centres sharing value across an open network.

Source: Fabric Ventures

When I speak of blockchain, I do not refer only to Bitcoin. Some folks argue it triggered the development of Web 3.0 as a whole.

Yet, for the sake of this essay, I do not want to focus on Bitcoin. Instead, I am referring to an architecture of blockchains with tokens, aka crypto networks.

Also Read: Building a privacy-first internet: How developers and enterprises can adapt to the new privacy normal

It could be generalised to a lot of different applications like Solana. That’s why let’s use the following definition of blockchain by Chris Dixon:

Blockchain: A virtual computer that runs on top of a network of physical computers that provides strong, auditable, game-theoretic guarantees that the code it runs will continue to operate as designed.

In traditional applications, the organisation running the business may decide to change how the product works. With blockchains, you need a critical mass of independent users to change their minds collectively for that to happen. Hence why, “guarantees that the code it runs will continue to operate as designed.”

To illustrate that, let’s dive deeper and take a look at the past ten years of Web 3.0’s’ history. To truly grasp the development in the space, we need to have context around all relevant activities. The more context we have, the easier it is to understand the true potential of Web 3.0.

Unfortunately, economic opportunities inevitably bring some bad players. In turn, the sentiment in some communities is that crypto is a bubble. Many people believe that there is no real value to those assets, and the bubble will pop sooner or later.

a16z Crypto school: Chris Dixon: Crypto Networks and Why They Matter

Like any other new technology, crypto develops in cycles. Most people got into crypto early on because the price was very attractive; think of Bitcoin in 2011.

Also Read: Understanding how the internet has changed business with Greg Zen

The attractive price prompted early adopters to start reading about blockchain. The combination of promising tech and attractive prices hooks you further. Over time that interest converts into new ideas, which naturally results in startups.

a16z Crypto school: Chris Dixon: Crypto Networks and Why They Matter

I like the following chart because it tracks growth across different activities. While token prices are essential, there is a lot more happening in the space. To truly understand why Web 3.0 is exciting, you need to consider growth in price, developer, startup, and social media activity.

a16z Crypto school: Chris Dixon: Crypto Networks and Why They Matter

It turns out there is a similar level of activity taking place across all those dimensions, which results in a steady and gradual growth until we reach the third wave of crypto in early 2016. At about that time, we saw exponential growth across all dimensions mentioned above.

Also Read: How the spatial web is changing the internet as we know it

There was a lot of initial coin offering (ICO) activity in that period. Unfortunately, many ICOs were led by bad players. In turn, things got a bit quiet after that up until COVID took place.

Now, we see growth in developer, startup, and social media activity once again. In a nutshell, throughout the past decade, we have seen consistent growth.

a16z Crypto school: Chris Dixon: Crypto Networks and Why They Matter

Today we are seeing the first attempts of building decentralised versions of Web 2.0 popular applications. That combines the utility of tools like Spotify while adding crypto back-end power.

In simple terms, Web 3.0 allows you to create solutions that pay people to use them through tokens. Imagine if all players in the Airbnb ecosystem could get financial incentives. Thus, get a piece of the wealth the platform created?

Today, only the founders, investors, and employees are sharing the upside. Tomorrow, we can reward the hosts, guests, and all sorts of partners too. Web 3.0 aligns incentives like never before while bringing back privacy.

Just as Web 2.0 didn’t automatically extinguish Web 1.0 (still gathering dust around some parts of the internet), the move to 3.0 will take time and integration with existing online systems.

The wheels have already been set in motion, and the train has left the station. Web 3.0 is a revolution in action; we are past the point of no return.

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Image credit: fgnopporn

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