The importance of having an open internet
Freedom of expression is extremely powerful, which is why it is constantly under siege from different frameworks. Sometimes, this can be ‘hate speech’ while other times it could be ‘misinformation’. Whatever the case may be, we must not lose sight of the fact that the free flow of information on the internet is powerful enough to prevent wars.
This we have seen in action relatively recently with the Syrian gas hoax scandal. If you recall, the legacy media, in a coordinated manner, pushed the
Syrian gas hoax to incite another devastating war, similar to the one that wrecked Libya and Iraq, destabilizing the region for decades to come. Even before the evidence to the contrary surfaced, the media’s reputation was sufficiently in the toilet to not pass the credibility check.
We have seen such instances of de-platforming countless times, as if some de-platforming chain is triggered, starting with MSM then following through with Big Tech and payment processors. In a nutshell, what had previously been reserved for the “Chinese social credit” system as a broadside rhetorical attack on state totalitarianism, has become commonplace in the West, although in a much more privatized and sophisticated manner.
For instance, the Biden administration recently announced it would form
partnerships with private companies to surveil the domestic population in order to circumvent legal hurdles and the U.S. Constitution. Clearly, the trend is moving towards more severe censorship in which the internet is immersed in consumerism, with little else going on or allowed to go on.
The internet’s centralized points of suppression
It is no secret that Google grew into its ‘behemoth’ stature because it is an extension of the security apparatus. At this point, it would be easier to list the activities Google is not involved in. While it completely dominates the search volume and internet traffic, it also engages in a wide range of manipulation to skew what is searchable and findable.
It is safe to say that the World Wide Web has become an abomination in light of what its creator, Tim Berners-Lee, envisioned it as — a decentralized, open exchange of information. Now, it is riddled with choking points. However, the good news is that Bitcoin (BTC) has already demonstrated the case for decentralization. As a sovereign, leaderless, deflationary currency, the cryptocurrency is now widely in use as a hedge against inflation.
Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies are able to counter centralized monetary power because they are decentralized and secured by
blockchain. Can this technology be used to accomplish the same for the internet?
Web 3.0 to the rescue?
From the 1990s through to today, the World Wide Web has undergone two distinct phases:
Web 1.0 – Static pages, low content-creation, personalized pages. Not very user-friendly, so it was mostly a read-only experience, as Berners-Lee likes to describe it.
Web 2.0 – This phase is marked by heightened user participation which generates a new kind of internet experience. From YouTube and Twitter to Reddit and Instagram, users submit content and interact with each other through dynamic pages, making it a read-write affair.
Web 3.0 is still a theoretical framework, as we only entered Web 2.0 relatively recently. Also referred to as the Semantic Web, it envisions the internet as something that goes beyond being effectively governed by a single search engine. Web 3.0’s key marker is its reliance on AI to connect users to more relevant and meaningful data.
In other words, Web 3.0 is supposed to be the culmination of a machine’s understanding of natural language. Moreover, semantic metadata would allow users to more expediently connect to whichever content and service they need. Such content would then be seamlessly distributed among devices and apps, leveling the Web 3.0 experience.
Lastly and even more importantly, the Semantic Web is poised to decentralize user data, so that it becomes portable and owned by the user. In the current Web 2.0, corporations leverage your user data, often without your permission, which is why most services on the Internet seem to be free.
What would Web 3.0 look like?
These key components alone — decentralized data storage and eschewing HTTP identifiers — make for a solid foundation for the future of DWeb. In the future, one could access content based on content relevance, not geo-relevance. This way, information can be accessed and retrieved without relying on a single point of failure in the form of a single server.
Alongside Protocol Labs’ projects, others are in the works which aim to substitute existing services such as:
Textile Photos – a decentralized version of Pinterest or Instagram.
DTube – a decentralized version of YouTube.
Graphite Docs – a decentralized cloud version of Google Docs.
OpenBazaar – a decentralized marketplace aiming to rival Amazon for digital goods.
Interestingly, hybrid alternatives are also emerging which combine blockchain, an app, and a website. For example, Odysee, formerly known as Lbry, uses the LBRY blockchain protocol to make uploaded videos, images, and documents unbannable, with the website itself being built on top of this censorship-resistant protocol. By the same token, LBRY can be used to reward content-creators in the form of micro-transactions, nullifying the need for ads and preventing the corruptive hand of sponsors from sneaking in.
Hurdles to Web 3.0 are significant but worth overcoming
As you can see, any service can be made to be decentralized. Although it is more difficult to do so, the technical side of things is the least of the concerns. One that is far more important is the heavyweight of the network effect. In other words, people tend to congregate and use services following the paths of least resistance, the ones that are immediately available using the least amount of effort and which are also the most popular.
When we compare Twitter and Gab, there is little difference in functionality. However, the difference that makes all the difference is the popularity of one over the other. Fortunately for DWeb, corporations are becoming increasingly aggressive in trying to stifle people’s thoughts and words. Therefore, a turning point is likely to occur for the network effect to take place within the decentralized space.