🎉 Share Your 2025 Year-End Summary & Win $10,000 Sharing Rewards!
Reflect on your year with Gate and share your report on Square for a chance to win $10,000!
👇 How to Join:
1️⃣ Click to check your Year-End Summary: https://www.gate.com/competition/your-year-in-review-2025
2️⃣ After viewing, share it on social media or Gate Square using the "Share" button
3️⃣ Invite friends to like, comment, and share. More interactions, higher chances of winning!
🎁 Generous Prizes:
1️⃣ Daily Lucky Winner: 1 winner per day gets $30 GT, a branded hoodie, and a Gate × Red Bull tumbler
2️⃣ Lucky Share Draw: 10
Is Web 3.0 really the future of the internet? Analyzing the essence and opportunities of the new generation of Web
As the concept of Web3.0 spreads throughout the crypto community, almost all projects claim to be Web3.0 applications, leading investors to be dazzled and find it difficult to distinguish true from false, and even becoming shields for scams. What exactly is true Web3.0? How does it differ from the existing internet? And how should investors identify opportunities?
The Core Definition of Web3.0: Who Controls Your Data?
There is no unified standard in the industry for the definition of Web3.0, but the perspectives of two influential figures are worth pondering.
Internet pioneer Tim Berners-Lee proposed in 2006 that the vision of Web3.0 is to enable users to control their own data—own data ownership. By 2014, Ethereum co-founder Gavin Wood further elaborated that Web3.0 should be a censorship-resistant, non-monopolizable, low-threshold network protocol that ensures the security of user data.
Essentially, Web3.0 is the third-generation internet based on blockchain technology, dedicated to realizing user data ownership, self-governance, and economic empowerment. This means that Web3.0 inherently possesses all the characteristics of blockchain—decentralization, immutability, traceability, transparency, permissionless, and trustless.
Why Build Web3.0? Revealing the True Dilemma of Web2.0
Imagine you are a content creator, posting content daily on social platforms, attracting fans’ likes, comments, and shares, monetizing through ads and live streams. This seems mutually beneficial, but there are fundamental contradictions:
Who owns the content you create? You or the platform?
Who controls the distribution of advertising revenue? The platform takes the lion’s share or it belongs to you?
Who safeguards personal information security? Will the platform leak your real-name verification data?
These are not hypothetical questions but the real dilemmas of today’s Web2.0 era—centralized platforms monopolize, data leaks are frequent, and user voice is deprived.
Web3.0 aims to use blockchain, smart contracts, and other technologies to let users regain control of their data, assets, and privacy. Simply put, Web3.0 is about returning all ownership taken by centralized institutions back to users.
What happens if it doesn’t do this? Platforms will lose users due to conflicts of interest, ultimately losing sustainability. This is a loss for all participants.
The Turning Point of the Third-Generation Internet: Evolution of Data, Identity, and Economic Models
From the development of the internet, the differences among Web1.0, Web2.0, and Web3.0 in terms of user participation, data control, and economic models are profound:
The breakthrough of Web3.0 lies in: users are no longer passive consumers but true owners of the ecosystem.
Web3.0 Ecosystem Panorama: The Relationship Between Blockchain, Cryptocurrency, NFT, and DeFi
The current Web3.0 ecosystem covers multiple interconnected sectors, each with clear positioning:
The core logic is: Web3.0 realizes data and asset ownership through blockchain technology, using cryptocurrencies and NFTs as economic tools to build a decentralized application ecosystem. Without blockchain, Web3.0 cannot be achieved; without crypto incentives, Web3.0 cannot operate.
Investment Landscape of the Web3.0 Track: Which Projects Are Worth Watching?
According to market data, the total market cap of the Web3.0 sector is about $23 billion, accounting for 2.18% of the overall crypto market, ranking 59th among all sectors. There are about 200 related projects, including well-known ones such as:
However, not all projects claiming to be Web3.0 have substantive value. An effective screening criterion is: Prioritize projects that solve real needs and have practical implementation results.
Projects like DOT, LINK, and FIL directly address core issues of Web3.0 infrastructure and data storage, forming strong moats—providing risk resistance in bear markets and easier explosive growth in bull markets. In contrast, projects based solely on concepts carry higher risks.
Future Outlook of Web3.0: Bubble or Major Trend?
Although the Web3.0 concept was proposed early, systematic development has only truly started in recent two years, so the current small scale is reasonable. Frankly speaking, Web3.0 may have bubbles—similar to early AI, after a rollercoaster of hype, it might face capital coldness.
But the essential difference is: Web3.0 addresses genuine problems, not false needs. It targets real existing dilemmas—centralized monopolies, data privacy violations, and user economic rights being exploited. Although current results fall short of expectations, this does not negate the long-term value and development direction of Web3.0.
Investment advice: If you are optimistic about this track, consider allocating a small amount of funds to prepare for potential future explosions. The key is to deeply understand the actual application value of projects, rather than blindly following hype.