WEB1 to WEB3 explained.

WEB1 to WEB3 explained.
Web 1.0

When the internet originated, it was a massive Wikipedia, all hyperlinked together on different pages.

It was known as the read-only era; its primary purpose was to display information and content with minimal user interaction—the world's giant book of knowledge.

What changed?

The advancement in JavaScript & Flash allowed websites to collect data on their users, with logins, forms and social media accounts as a few examples.

Web 2.0

No one cared about the impact of zero privacy because we got likes!

Companies such as Facebook started collecting so much data that they realised selling that information to marketers was revolutionary for the industry and gave businesses a way to leverage their information into profits (Facebook adds and AdWords as examples)

A prime example is before a wife has told her husband she is pregnant, Facebook has already started to generate adverts on his page about parenting. How?

A wife searched for her symptoms online


Facebook collected that data;


Facebook worked out she was pregnant before she did


Facebook started posting adverts on her husband's page.

Web 3.0

Most people have used file share programs like Napster or torrents, where content is stored on 100s if not 1000s of computers and distributed from there. Well, web 3.0 content will be similar; if Facebook wanted to remove a post, they would have to locate all 1000 computers and remove them simultaneously to stop this. All 1000 computers would have to be online simultaneously for this to work.

In short, censorship will be gone, the creator will own the content (via blockchain), and they receive the revenue for that content, not Facebook. Also, People will have multiple untraceable identities without being able to be connected.

It is a straightforward, simple explanation, but it helps understand web 3.0, allowing people to start brainstorming on its future advantage in business.
CSNA
https://csna.com.au/2022/07/30/web1-to-web3-explained/

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