The Third-gen Web is about Public Good : Daily Current Affairs

Date: 28/04/2023

Relevance: GS-3: Science and Technology- Developments and their Applications and Effects in Everyday Life; Generations of Web.

Key Phrases: U.S.- India Strategic Partnership Forum, Online interactions, Web 3.0, Metadata, digital asset, National Blockchain Strategy 2021, Digital Platforms, Internet of Things (IoT), Safety tools and Features, Decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs, Data Privacy.

Context:

  • There is a general perception towards the third-generation web that it is biased towards gaming and cryptocurrencies but it covers more.
  • As per the U.S.- India Strategic Partnership Forum’s 2021 report, the third-gen web will be crucial for India to realize its $1.1 trillion digital asset opportunity by 2032.

Key Highlights:

  • From a policy perspective, the next-gen web is complex and part of the problem lies with the diverse descriptors employed by experts.
  • It is also hard to comprehend the web's immense social relevance.

What is Web 3?

  • In Web 3, users will have ownership stakes in platforms and applications unlike now where tech giants control the platforms.
  • Web3 is more secure, as there is no single point of failure that can be exploited by hackers.
  • Web3 has the ability to create and use decentralized applications (dApps) and smart contracts.
    • These dApps can be used for a variety of purposes, such as social media, finance, gaming, and more.
  • Web3 seeks to radically transform the manner in which data is generated, monetised, shared and circulated.
    • Further, it advocates decentralized data storage systems with the objective of unshackling the oligopolistic grip of technology behemoths over data.
  • Web3 has file-sharing systems such as the Interplanetary File System which are cryptographically protected, more secure and capable of functioning off the Internet and off blockchains.
    • In this manner, Web3 seeks to overcome the data storage barriers of blockchains.
  • Web3’s boldest element is the strategic role it assigns to non- custodial wallets that function as digital passports for users to access blockchain-enabled transaction platforms.
    • These wallets aid the creation of an ‘ownership economy,’ whereby creators themselves control their content.
    • Fundamentally, they work as the digital proof of identity.
  • Web3 seeks to replace micro-economic organizations with decentralized autonomous organizations (DAOs).
    • The spirit of Web3 is Decentralized Autonomous Organization (DAO).
    • It means all the business rules and governing rules in any transaction are transparently available for anyone to see and software will be written conforming to these rules.
  • At a more macro level, it seeks to create a distributed economic system, where special classes of native digital tokens and cryptocurrencies would form the media of monetary circulation.
  • In general, Web3 platforms would serve to raise the efficiency of peer-to-peer transactions.
  • Apart from utility tokens that enable users to access life support services, Web3 systems also seek to generate fungible digital assets to reward local providers of data storage capacity for their services.
  • Asset tokens that are native to the new-gen web have the potential to function as capital mobilization tools for Web3 projects.
    • Likewise, stakeholders of DAOs can utilize tokens to exercise their voting rights. The NFTs of Web3 are more dynamic as they seek to incorporate improvements brought in by incremental innovations.

Web 3 is not Web 3.0:

  • For web-tech buffs, Web3 is decentralized, privacy-oriented, blockchain-driven and crypto-asset friendly; while Web 3.0 upholds the property of the ‘semantic web,’ which is powered by Artificial Intelligence (AI).
    • The real point about the semantic web is its ability to recombine information available on different websites to generate new content and knowledge resources that are more authentic and creative.
  • Followers of Web 3.0 claim that their version is endowed with robust capability on the data analytics front.
    • This way, it is argued that Web 3.0 will create far better search engines.

Different Generations of Web

  • Web 1.0
    • It was developed in 1989.
    • Mostly static web pages where users would go to a website and then read and interact with the static information.
    • Users could not post reviews, comments and likes etc.
  • Web 2.0
    • Fully developed in 2004, and It is still the age of Web 2.0 now.
    • Users can create content, interact and contribute in the form of comments, registering likes, sharing and uploading their photos or videos and perform other such activities.
  • Web 5.0
    • Web 5.0 is aimed at building an extra decentralized web.
    • Web 5.0 is Web 2.0 plus Web 3.0 that will allow users to ‘own their identity’ on the Internet and ‘control their data’.
    • Both Web 3.0 and Web 5.0 envision an Internet without threat of censorship – from governments or big tech, and without fear of significant outages.

How can India benefit?

  • India’s handicraft industry is renowned for design-related innovations, many of which are not protected by Intellectual Property rights.
    • The digital tokens minted by Web 3 platforms would enable our handcraft enterprises to secure their innovations.
  • Web 3-based instruction tools enable the rapid dissemination of grassroots innovations from master artisans to fellow members, which would improve the economic fortunes of craftsmen and artisan communities in north east, western and peninsular India.
  • India’s major digital public infrastructure push and the large-scale deployment of Internet of Things (IoT) in rural development projects offer major possibilities for deploying Web 3 in rural areas.
  • One of the understated facts of India’s transformation story in recent times has been the rapid rise of community data.
    • The Atal Bhujal Yojana is an important source of data on groundwater utilization practices and aquifer contamination, although this resource remains largely untapped for want of data analytics capabilities at the community level.
    • This limitation can be overcome by Web3’s (decentralized) analytics systems.
  • Web 3.0 can also yield insights from large volumes of community data, generated by IoT-enabled development programmes such as the Jal Jeevan Mission.
  • Web 3.0’s natural advantage of facilitating ‘analytics at the edge’ provides considerable scope for mapping the water use habits of communities.
  • Similarly, early warning systems for floods will improve with Web 3.0 due to data analytics facilities being obtained at the sub-basin level.
  • One constraint today is the inability of data analytics capabilities to catch up with the pace of data generation in rural areas.
    • India has a rapidly expanding pool of data analytics and web design talent.
    • By providing incentives for decentralized analytics and tokenising them (as envisaged in Web 3), it is possible to draw upon the talent pool for the benefit of rural communities.
  • Therefore, Web 3.0 will have a transformative role in regionally disadvantaged areas.

Conclusion:

  • India’s National Blockchain Strategy 2021 proposes to explore tokenization and apply blockchain solutions for development programmes.
    • It will be a natural progression for India to craft a third-gen web strategy that optimizes public interest and it should seek to combine the welcome features of Web3 and Web 3.0.

Source: The Hindu

Mains Question:

Q. What is Web 3.0? Also, mention the associated potential advantages that can benefit India with reference to public good. (250 Words).