Why Some See Web 3.0 as the Future of the Internet | WSJ

– [Narrator] Web3 is the newest buzzword taking over the tech and
venture capital world. And if you've found yourself
wondering what it means, you're not alone. Web3 is seen as the third
generation of the internet, a decentralized online ecosystem
based on the blockchain. – Web3 represents kind of a new philosophy about how to realize these technologies in a more distributed and democratic way. – [Narrator] Venture capitalists
have invested billions into this vision, but some
tech experts are unconvinced that Web3 could scale globally. Skeptics like Tesla CEO, Elon Musk, have called it a marketing buzzword. – A lot of the skepticism about
web 3.0 comes from the fact that it's early expressions
are fairly primitive. – [Narrator] As experts debate whether or not this new version of the web can become a reality, here are some of the underlying principles behind the vision for Web 3.0.

(keyboard clicking) To better understand Web 3.0 and what sets it apart
from the web we use today, you have to go back to the
early days of the internet, what experts now refer to as Web 1.0. Most of the participants
were content consumers who were limited to navigating through individual static web pages. – Web 1.0, for those who remember, was just, you know, raw HTML and lots of very simple web pages, and it wasn't really
controlled by anybody. – [Narrator] This was a
more decentralized version of the web, meaning anyone
who knew how to code could build on it from
their own computers. But at this time only
a small number of users had the technical skills to
create and publish content.

Then came Web 2.0, which is the stage of the
internet we're living through now. Web technologies like JavaScript and HTML5 made the internet more interactive, allowing startups to build platforms like Facebook, Google,
Amazon and many others. For the first time, anyone
could publish content online even if they couldn't code. – Web 2.0 is this modern,
centralized verse of the web. You know, we're all sharing
things on social media which are owned by, you know,
only two or three companies, and we're all using Google Search. – [Narrator] These
companies own and manage the data collected from their users, and they frequently
track and save this data and use it for targeted ads. – What's at the core of
their business model is data. – [Narrator] Olga Mack
is a blockchain lecturer at UC Berkeley, and is
optimistic about Web3's potential to reshape the internet. – The data economy, where
the user generated content, whether it's a conversation or a video, that is an exchange for services. And so there is a perception that this monopoly of
data could be abused.

– [Narrator] Here's where the
vision for Web 3.0 comes in. The term Web3 was first
coined by one of the creators of the Ethereum blockchain, Gavin Wood. In a 2014 blog post, Wood
envisioned Web3 as an open and decentralized version of the internet. Theoretically, users would be able to exchange money and
information on the web without the need for a middleman, like a bank or a tech company. In this vision for a Web3 world, people would have more
control over their data and be able to sell it if they choose.

And it would all be operated on a decentralized,
distributed ledger technology. The most common version of this
is known as the blockchain. While still considered
relatively new and unproven, it could offer more transparency
and autonomy for users. – The computers that are actually doing that computing for
you or storing that data, anyone could own those computers, anyone can become a
part of that blockchain. And so it's not Facebook and
Google's computers doing that. – [Narrator] With a single,
personalized account, users would theoretically
be able to move seamlessly from social media to email to shopping, creating a public record on the blockchain of all that activity.

But how exactly would
Web3 remain operational if it's not controlled by a
central corporation or entity? Theoretically, people would
be given virtual tokens, or cryptocurrencies, to incentivize them to participate in the operation of Web3. A central element of the system is so called DEFI, or
decentralized finance. – And the idea is that
if you can issue a token for everything in the universe, if you can financialize
every possible interaction of computers and software and humans, then you can create this vast
ecosystem of cryptocurrencies which can be traded, which can be valued
relative to one another. – [Narrator] Still, it's unclear how this decentralized token
system would be regulated, how it could operate on a large scale, or even how well it would distribute control of the internet.

Critics of the idea like
Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey, called Web3 "a centralized
entity with a different label." – Developers who really dug into this think that the underlying
blockchain structures of Web 3.0 are very insecure, not
decentralized as promised, they're actually as centralized
as previous technologies. – [Narrator] Some see Web 3.0
as a critical building block IN creating the metaverse,
an immersive online world where people can use avatars to socialize, shop, work, and play. But others say Web3 and the metaverse are two very different concepts. – Because the Metaverse is
being hyped a lot right now and Web3 is, there are some companies at
the intersection of the two, like let's create a metaverse that, you know, somehow it's
connected to the blockchain. – [Narrator] Right now,
Web3 is still very much an abstract concept with
little real-world foundation. Skeptics, like engineer
and blogger Stephen Diehl, argue that web 3.0, doesn't
have the computing power, bandwidth, or storage to
work on any practical level. – For skeptics of Web3,
their argument is that, you know, tokens and
cryptocurrencies in general are just a giant bubble, and as soon as it pops, in
their view, all of this nonsense about how that's going to
build the next internet will go away.

– [Narrator] While it remains to be seen whether or not Web3 will become a reality, the philosophy behind it is
driving billions in investments in the venture capital world, funding a vast ecosystem of
decentralized internet services. – So there's so much real-world money going into building Web3 startups that even if, as a concept,
it proves unworkable, we're gonna be hearing about
it for a long time yet to come. (gentle music).

As found on YouTube

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