What is Web3.0 and why is it important? Web 3.0 is the next version of the Internet

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Web 3.0 is a vision to return to the early Internet, with built-in superpower decryption, a media platform covering the decentralized web, and kicked off its Web 3.0 interpreter with the description: "The next major iteration of the Internet, it Possibly wresting control from the centralized companies that dominate the web today.”

While this explanation may build enthusiasm among early adopters and developers, it does nothing for Web 3.0, and the best way to describe the positive features of Web 3.0 is to take a quick look at the history of the Internet. The early Internet Web 1.0 from the 1980s to the early 2000s was decentralized. It's built on a series of open protocols that anyone can build on directly, HTTP for websites, SMTP for email, SMS for messaging, IRC for chat, and FTP for file transfers. The advantage of this is that these protocols are universally accepted and unaffected by changes; I can use HTTP over HTTP and if people know my site address, they can access my site directly without anyone intermediary.

Web 3.0 is the next version of the Internet, built on top of cryptoeconomic networks like Bitcoin and Ethereum. According to Dixon, “Cryptonetworks combine the best features of the first two internet eras: community-managed decentralized networks that will eventually surpass the capabilities of state-of-the-art centralized services”.

The core idea of ​​Web 3.0 is consensus protocols and standards, a collection of open-source projects that anyone can use to build according to an agreed set of rules, which will gain financial value over time and interact with Shared by everyone who contributes to the API. Web 3.0 is not about building isolated products, but about interoperability. This is a key concept to keep in mind.

This article was originally published on the "" public platform, so stay tuned for more in-depth interpretations of the Metaverse.

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