The internet was not born ready. It went through three major revolutions. Shall we break each one down?
Web 1.0: The Internet That Only Read
In the 90s, the internet was like a giant digital newspaper. You would enter, read text and see images, but that was it. No comments, no likes, no interaction. It was “read-only” — you consumed content, period. Simple, but quite limited.
Web 2.0: The Internet that Became Social
Here comes the 21st century and everything changes. People realized that they could do more than just read. They could participate.
They emerged:
Social networks: Facebook, WhatsApp, Twitter — you can now post, comment, like
Sharing platforms: YouTube, Google Drive, Instagram
Wikis and collaboration: Wikipedia (anyone edits)
The internet became interactive. You were not just a reader; you were a creator too. The downside? Your data became a commodity. Meta, Google, Amazon — all the giants live off selling your data. You are the product.
Web 3.0: The Internet That Truly Belongs to You
Now blockchain arrives and changes the game again. Web3 = decentralization + ownership.
Instead of centralized platforms storing your data, now you have:
Your wallet: Your assets, your keys, your security
Smart contracts: Agreements that run without intermediaries
dApps: Apps that run on the blockchain
Some examples that work now:
CryptoKitties: Unique digital cats that you truly own (NFT pioneer)
Uniswap: Direct crypto exchange, no exchange in between.
Brave Browser: Browse without tracking, earn tokens for it
Golem: Rent your PC to perform heavy calculations on the network
Augur: Decentralized prediction market
The Great Point
Web 1 = Read
Web 2 = Read + Write ( but someone profits from your data )
Web 3 = Read + Write + Own (your data, your assets, your rules)
It's still in development, but the idea is clear: decentralize the power back to you.
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From Web 1.0 to Web 3: Understand the Evolution of the Internet in 3 Phases
The internet was not born ready. It went through three major revolutions. Shall we break each one down?
Web 1.0: The Internet That Only Read
In the 90s, the internet was like a giant digital newspaper. You would enter, read text and see images, but that was it. No comments, no likes, no interaction. It was “read-only” — you consumed content, period. Simple, but quite limited.
Web 2.0: The Internet that Became Social
Here comes the 21st century and everything changes. People realized that they could do more than just read. They could participate.
They emerged:
The internet became interactive. You were not just a reader; you were a creator too. The downside? Your data became a commodity. Meta, Google, Amazon — all the giants live off selling your data. You are the product.
Web 3.0: The Internet That Truly Belongs to You
Now blockchain arrives and changes the game again. Web3 = decentralization + ownership.
Instead of centralized platforms storing your data, now you have:
Some examples that work now:
The Great Point
Web 1 = Read Web 2 = Read + Write ( but someone profits from your data ) Web 3 = Read + Write + Own (your data, your assets, your rules)
It's still in development, but the idea is clear: decentralize the power back to you.