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Web3 is not Decentralisation – it’s a Ploy to put Crypto Bros in Charge

Author: DyslexicAtheist

Score: 121

Comments: 75

Date: 2021-11-30 16:59:45

Web Link

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LouisSayers wrote at 2021-11-30 18:22:46:

All anyone talks about in crypto is how to make money from crypto - this is the number one use case for it.

Sure, it's used on the dark Web, but when was the last time you heard someone talk about how great it was to buy something with crypto?

I can't get over the fact that crypto seems kinda useless - in the sense that it doesn't actually get used for anything other than on crypto exchanges.

Talk of Web3 is also equally confusing to me. It seems to me that people want to spend less time with tech these days, not more. If anything it seems that web3 is going to be more about interaction with the real world, especially after pandemic lockdowns.

People talking about social networks paying its users and smart contracts etc... I also just don't understand - these things are already possible but have not been done with existing tech, so why would anything change just because we have NFTs or whatever?

It all smells of greed and feels like people peddling some new MLM system.

You can talk about gov and how the man has us all entrapped in the system or whatever, but we don't typically store lumps of gold in our homes, so why would you do the same with crypto (which is arguably easier to steal)?

ipaddr wrote at 2021-11-30 18:48:50:

Getting and spend coin in the early days was the draw. Too much money poured in making everyone afraid to spend because everything is worth so much. I remember people dropping coin in reddit to anyone with a positive comment.

PikachuEXE wrote at 2021-12-01 01:13:56:

Yup

Every "currency" (even the legal ones like USD) are in the end "assets"

If people predict that the value (not price) will rise, they hold.

If people predict that the value will drop, they sell (i.e. swap it with something else).

8note wrote at 2021-12-01 01:35:17:

Currencies however, are expected to drop in value slowly

yosito wrote at 2021-11-30 20:09:01:

Storj DCS is a pretty cool real world use of crypto. I'm using it every day to make backups of my cloud data.

xiaomai wrote at 2021-12-01 00:30:59:

I could be wrong, but I don't think storj is "crypto"/web3. It's decentralized and encrypted, but it's not like files are being stored on a blockchain. (I think they did to an ICO way back in the day, but I don't think that has any bearing on current Storj).

yosito wrote at 2021-12-01 01:32:13:

People who host nodes are paid in STORJ token, so the entire thing is financed through crypro.

https://www.storj.io/node

xiaomai wrote at 2021-12-01 00:32:26:

I guess what I'm trying to say here is that decentralization and cryptography obviously predate all this blockchain nonsense and we shouldn't let the crypto hucksters try to "own" those terms.

etchalon wrote at 2021-11-30 17:28:14:

The fact it's impossible to disconnect the profit motive from the technology stack should be incredibly concerning, and the article makes a good point as to why.

My primary concern, right now, is that Web3 is inaccessible to the majority of people, because its very architecture makes a "free" version of it impossible.

tuxman wrote at 2021-11-30 20:41:10:

I've used IPFS[1] to store and host files completely separate from cryptocurrency. IPFS is a major backbone of Web3 tech, and is responsible for enabling much of the current NFT craze _because_ IPFS is free. The same company that made and maintains IPFS also created Filecoin, and the fact that the two are completely separate projects to the point where I can and have used IPFS _for free_ without having any knowledge of or owning any Filecoin speaks volumes.

Judging from some view of the Web3[2] stack, I can create a decentralized application that exists entirely through p2p storage without ever actually having to incorporate a blockchain or cryptocurrency, and this can still be considered Web3 technology.

[1]

https://docs.ipfs.io/concepts/faq/#what-is-ipfs

[2]

https://web3-technology-stack.readthedocs.io/en/latest/

diveanon wrote at 2021-11-30 17:33:53:

Using web3 for auth costs nothing, and users here have often stated an interest in an ad free pay-per-use web.

Here it is, people are just confused because there is a strong incentive on this forum to trash anything cryptocurrency related.

Web3 is by far the easiest way to provide auth to a web app right now, if you haven’t experimented with it I highly recommend giving it a try. The react library is a decent place to start.

whymarrh wrote at 2021-11-30 17:39:50:

> Web3 is by far the easiest way to provide auth to a web app right now

Easiest by what measure? As I understand it, few browsers (read: only one or two) have built in wallets and outside of that the UX for this auth isn’t great. It’s hard to see how this is better/easier to use than existing OIDC/"Sign In With X" solutions.

RileyJames wrote at 2021-12-01 01:06:10:

Click “Connect” and sign into MetaMask wallet.

Agreed, it’s much the same as OIDC.

Tho personally, beyond GitHub for dev related sites, I won’t use them.

If anything it enables “websites” to be simpler, smaller.

A UI atop a single function.

Without the bloat. Without the “we must do enough to show value to get users to sign up”.

I just auth, use it, and move on with my life.

Sometimes there’s a fee per use. Sometimes that value is exchanged somewhere else in the transaction. But either way, I got what I needed and I’m done.

wombatpm wrote at 2021-11-30 17:48:28:

The pay-per-use web has always been a pipedream because of theoverhead of microtransactions. A one time view of a page may be worth $0.25 , but nobody can make that work because of creditcard transaction fees - hence the move to mothly fees and subscriptions. I fail to see how crypto with its variable 'gas' charges are going to make that work or work better. The only ones who made it work were the phone company where they could bill you by the minute based on your activity - and we are right back to centralization.

crypot wrote at 2021-11-30 17:50:30:

Bitcoin fixes this. Read the whitepaper.

zeruch wrote at 2021-11-30 18:24:41:

"Bitcoin fixes this. Read the whitepaper."

If that's your basis, then I don't think you're inspired by anything other than pecuniary interest, which is the crux of the issue by the OP.

jl2718 wrote at 2021-11-30 18:15:23:

It’s amazing that Bitcoin still isn’t Bitcoin yet.

Sohcahtoa82 wrote at 2021-11-30 22:41:43:

I can't take this comment seriously.

It's pretty well-known that Bitcoin is likely the _worst_ way to digitally send micropayments. The fees are way too high. Bitcoin does not scale.

Yeah, the Lightning Network exists, but that doesn't really solve the problem for one-off microtransactions.

krallja wrote at 2021-11-30 22:02:56:

The current transaction fee is about $2.19. Nobody can use Bitcoins for microtransactions because the fees are worse than credit card networks, PayPal, etc.

etchalon wrote at 2021-11-30 19:08:02:

Nothing costs anything for auth.

What's expensive is storage and meaningful actions.

In terms of "easy way to provide auth" … for who? Certainly not end users.

Also, the people who want a "pay per use" web are, shockingly, generally people for whom "pay per use" is financially feasible. That is not the majority of people.

dcabrejas wrote at 2021-11-30 19:39:04:

Exactly. The author is just confused. Web3 doesn't require anyone to pay anything.

jude- wrote at 2021-11-30 19:40:52:

Yeah, how dare people try to make money without resorting to surveillance capitalism. What's the world coming to.

coyotespike wrote at 2021-11-30 17:37:09:

Most of the piece is mood affiliation, accusing anyone supporting crypto aims of bad faith. Under the fluff, there are two substantive points:

- If Web3 advocates move essential internet services on-chain, that would centralize into a single-database-like source of truth - not decentralize.

- Web3 will not eliminate hierarchies of influence.

The second is unambiguously true. For the first, in my view, there's a sort Schrodinger's cat thing with crypto. DAOs seem much more open than corporations - and they're also creating mini-economies which can lock out non-token holders, privileging the financialized. So it's also kind of true, but the matter is complex.

Any odds, there are a lot of sincere and smart people in crypto, and dismissing them all as basically evil is silly.

motohagiography wrote at 2021-11-30 18:19:57:

_Imagine if someone were to suggest that all web infrastructure should share the same database. That would rightly be seen as an absurd idea — but that’s what Web3 advocates are essentially suggesting._

I think BGP routing tables, ARIN, ICANN, whois records, and DNS root servers are equally as centralized as a blockchain would be - in that they form top level federations, sort of how "the internet" is centralized when you call it one thing. Cloudflare, Akamai, AWS etc are more centralized as single companies. Blockchains are essentially nested application/data layer federation protocols.

It's hard to respond with more charity than he ventured, so I'd ask if there is a smarter form of his argument I should consider. It may be worth hearing what the concern is rooted in.

maccolgan wrote at 2021-11-30 22:08:40:

>Blockchains are essentially nested application/data layer federation protocols.

They are trustless, that's the biggest advantage.

thesuperbigfrog wrote at 2021-11-30 19:13:42:

Web3 requires retrofitting the web to use blockchain technologies to do what the web can mostly do already.

In "Blockchains Are a Bad Idea", James Mickens gives several arguments against blockchain-based systems like Bitcoin:

See his presentation here:

https://youtu.be/15RTC22Z2xI

1. People have out-of-band trust relationships in real life which reduce the likelihood of malice. Bitcoin-style anonymous identities undermine trust relationships and are not needed for legitimate (not illegal) transactions.

2. Real life legal systems encourage good behaviors. If you have a dispute with someone, you can sue them. Bitcoin and related systems lack these protections.

3. Existing tools such as public-key cryptography and digital signatures can provide most of the functionality that applications need without the problems that blockchain-based systems have.

lucasmullens wrote at 2021-11-30 17:31:59:

I'm not sure I agree with this article. It's like saying the web is centralized because everyone has to use the same web technologies. Decentralization is about how many people have control, not about how many choices in technology there are.

If something like a social network on top of Bitcoin takes off, the Crypto Bros will have far, far less control than Mark Zuckerberg does over Facebook.

skulk wrote at 2021-11-30 17:47:46:

TFA addresses your claim.

> The idea of the Decentralised Autonomous Organisation that runs itself by consensus, where nobody is really in charge, is illusory. Some individuals will always find a way to be more influential, whether that’s through money, connections or rhetoric. A DAO doesn’t change this simple fact of life; it simply hides it with a new layer of obfuscation.

im3w1l wrote at 2021-11-30 23:22:05:

That's like saying that dictatorship is better than democracy, because someone will always be more influential and democracy just hides it.

ryan_lane wrote at 2021-12-01 01:45:32:

It's more like saying "Just because you call yourself the democratic nation of x doesn't mean your country is a democracy."

cracker_jacks wrote at 2021-11-30 17:43:36:

This is the thing I do not fully understand about crypto and more specifically Bitcoin. If Bitcoin is successful, it will inevitably create a tiny group of super-wealthy early adopters amongst everyone else and we are back to the same rigged system evangelists were arguing crypto solves. Even worse, there is no method of confiscation/redistribution/taxation to prevent monopolies.

landemva wrote at 2021-12-01 00:18:18:

Do you have any btc, or still waiting in case it doesn't catch on?

plorkyeran wrote at 2021-11-30 19:28:21:

What about that do you not get? That's exactly what the people pushing it are hoping for.

okareaman wrote at 2021-11-30 17:20:49:

I'm having trouble understanding what problem Web3 is attempting to solve

okareaman wrote at 2021-11-30 17:47:26:

Right after I posted this I logged onto Twitter to read this by Kimbal Musk tweeted 20 hours ago: _"Web3 reminds me of 1995 Internet days. So many older people (younger than I am now) just could not get it. It was clear as a bell to 22yr old me. Now I understand those older people better and I'm working as fast as possible to be a better old person_"

https://twitter.com/kimbal/status/1465425295393976321

mkipper wrote at 2021-11-30 22:40:33:

Sure, most revolutionary ideas are pushed by younger people and rejected by older people. That doesn't make every idea pushed by younger people revolutionary. And the convenient fact that early adopters of this revolutionary idea will become incredibly wealthy if it takes off doesn't really help with credibility.

This is survivorship bias stretched to a pretty crazy extreme. I'm pretty sure you could make a much larger list of differences in the evolution of the web and web3 than similarities.

GDC7 wrote at 2021-11-30 18:40:01:

> It was clear as a bell to 22yr old me

For sure! Pumping and dumping overvalued equity to bigger fools together with his cousin.

angryasian wrote at 2021-11-30 18:27:59:

I read about how people are making the claim of how this will bring back the web of the early days. The web was always introduced as walled gardens and people love walled gardens. From the beginning if was Yahoo telling you what links to click or aol portals. Today its Apple's curated ecosystem and Facebook.

I don't see how decentralizing anything helps.

mosdl wrote at 2021-11-30 20:30:50:

Indeed, most people talking about how different "web1.0" don't seem to have ever used it.

beepbooptheory wrote at 2021-11-30 18:59:49:

One theory I have is that the gravity of capital is pushing things towards a world where users pay for more and more web infrastructure costs. Decentralization, it appears, does not lead to democracy, but it does lead to less monolithic servers, and more shared mesh/edge computation. Just good business sense to offload computation on regular users, if the tech is there.

winddude wrote at 2021-11-30 17:31:18:

A bit like usenet of old, information could be recreated on everyone running a full node. Making it much harder to censor.

Now this makes sense for a number of industries, particularly financial, where the data is small, and the rewards are large. Storing petabites of porn on a distributed blockchain, probably not efficient.

okareaman wrote at 2021-11-30 18:20:20:

So extrapolating here, web3 is a new kind of anti-censorship system with blockchain that ensures the original information isn't corrupted and replaced with misinformation? It's an interesting topic, but it seems in relation to finances, we're talking about a system that enables financial crime.

Telex (anti-censorship system)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telex_(anti-censorship_system)

Internet censorship circumvention

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_censorship_circumvent...

ehutch79 wrote at 2021-11-30 17:21:26:

It's trying to solve the problem of crypto bros not being rich enough?

loceng wrote at 2021-11-30 17:24:37:

A solution looking for a problem to solve, so they can try to realize their artificially inflated paper profits - so they're not left holding the bag.

landemva wrote at 2021-12-01 00:23:23:

Double spend and censorship resistance are a couple big ones. Privileged westerners have courts and banking which are good enough, so not much reason for them to be interested. Probably nothing.

wan23 wrote at 2021-11-30 19:05:16:

There are a few things that people find exciting, but for me the idea of being able to pay for content frictionlessly is pretty neat. I'd love, for example, if when you get one of those ad blocker blocker popups if there was an option to pay .005 cents to bypass it.

rfd4sgmk8u wrote at 2021-11-30 19:24:05:

Nah, this article is way off base. Web3 is at best a public key signing protocol that authenticates a web client (primarily metamask).

You can use this for any authentication with an ethereum-like address, eg: 0x06012c8cf97bead5deae237070f9587f8e7a266d

Spending coins is not actually the point. Its to authenticate with a public key, the same way SSH public key authentication works.

Most of the time, one should not be spending coins on random websites anyway.

This complaint is like saying public key authentication is a plot to put big-PKI in charge. Nonsensical.

butz wrote at 2021-11-30 18:16:47:

Writing anything to blockchain costs money ("gas" on ETH) and energy. And deleting written data is practically impossible. Why not skip it altogether and build Web3 as peer-to-peer based, really decentralized system?

carlosdp wrote at 2021-11-30 18:25:30:

Great idea! How are we going to get people to run their own persistent servers at scale so this peer-to-peer network stays online 24/7 though?

Oh I know, why don't we build some kind of economic incentive that pays whoever wants to run one of these servers some small amount of money for doing so, and we all pay a little to these servers when we want to do things with the network?

floatboth wrote at 2021-11-30 20:48:57:

How do BitTorrent trackers successfully encourage seeding?

Information wants to be free, fuck economic incentives. Stop financializing everything.

butz wrote at 2021-11-30 22:10:16:

Most people already have persistent servers - smartphones. Considering how much tracking data and ads are already sent up and down the network by apps, installing a tiny web server to share a simple blog or image gallery shouldn't make a huge difference. And 24/7 uptime is not strictly necessary; considering digital wellbeing, that might be an unintended feature.

ipaddr wrote at 2021-11-30 19:04:57:

Under that model nodes would contain search indexes. Content would be self hosted or blockchain hosted for a fee or sponsor hosted through ads. It could work..

jeroenhd wrote at 2021-11-30 17:42:01:

I still don't know what web3 is supposed to be. It sounds like IPFS and bittorrent but with more cryptocoins involved somehow.

I've only heard the term from people pushing their investment in crypto so maybe I'm biased against it. The whole "decentralised" part of it is already here in the form of peer to peer networking and regular old web servers anyone can run. The fediverse is also great at replicating information across networks. Is that what's meant by web3?

People and companies choose to centralise the internet because it's easy and because it's cheap. Graph theory is hard to get right in software, after all.

endisneigh wrote at 2021-11-30 21:53:27:

How do you delete data in Web3? Game over. And no, encrypting data is not deleting it.

If you even remotely value your privacy you won’t support blockchain backed web3

landemva wrote at 2021-12-01 00:36:59:

Destroy the contract.

https://solidity-by-example.org/hacks/self-destruct

If you had mailed CDs of pictures and all your data to everyone in town, you mostly gave up your privacy already. And then you want a magic delete-all-CDs button?

endisneigh wrote at 2021-12-01 00:49:21:

Your link doesn’t explain how deletion is possible

landemva wrote at 2021-12-01 01:35:12:

Call the contract self destruct function. The contract and stored info (state) are removed.

You may want to explain how mailing CDs to everyone in town allows an expectation they will destroy the CDs when you press the magic delete-all-CDs button.

If you want to publish your info on a public ledger, and you want privacy, you would be studying zk proofs rather than learning about selfdestruct().

mk2k21 wrote at 2021-11-30 19:13:48:

Blockchain is the Ponzi pyramid that wants to eat the world.

neophyt3 wrote at 2021-11-30 20:55:45:

it should not be blockchain but cryptocurrency and crypto exchanges

GDC7 wrote at 2021-11-30 18:45:47:

In charge? In charge of what?

The most relevant thought leaders in the crypto world are people who have no intention of "owning it", meaning being at the helm of an organization.

They are the so called hodlers and traders, like Microstrategy CEO.

People like Vitalik Buterin would deserve to be in charge because they seem genuinely interested in providing soltions, but he seems very ineffective because he's in search of a problem.

g42gregory wrote at 2021-11-30 17:48:51:

Anything better than the Social Media Bros?

scotuswroteus wrote at 2021-11-30 20:39:40:

We need an abbreviation for "Ploy To Put Crypto Bros in Charge"

aero-glide2 wrote at 2021-11-30 17:26:56:

I think the title is a bit sexist. In my friend circle, a lot of women are interested in crypto currencies (more than traditional stock markets).

green01 wrote at 2021-11-30 18:03:26:

just an unsubstantiated slur against men same as tech bro or bro culture

Butterhugger wrote at 2021-11-30 18:09:29:

Your thinking is wrong and you should probably log off. Because we live under patriarchy sexism against men just sounds like cuckolded incels complaining. It doesn't exist.

Edit: this incel man child flagged me to the mods in under 15 seconds lmfao

diveanon wrote at 2021-11-30 17:30:43:

This is an extremely inaccurate take by someone who also decided it was a good idea to bring sexism into the conversation.

Why does this kind of trash get upvoted here?

exdsq wrote at 2021-11-30 17:33:25:

Because anything related to crypto is immediately judged the same way among HN users - all crypto/web3 projects are inherently bad

emerged wrote at 2021-11-30 19:57:49:

I find HN also immediately judges things like pickpocketing, littering, punching babies, and keying strangers cars. They just don’t get it!

exdsq wrote at 2021-11-30 20:10:53:

Yes, working on cryptographic and consensus protocols is very similar to punching babies

https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

evergrande wrote at 2021-11-30 17:40:58:

Silly title and claim.

Web3 is inclusive in the fullest sense of the term. It does not care if you are a bro. It doesn't even know if you are a bro. It doesn't care where you live, what your name is, what your opinions are, what your hair or skin color is, what your credit score is. Nothing. Anyone and everyone on planet Earth can use it. This is not true of traditional banking and other web2 services. Where people get locked out or denied entry every day by central actors.

Furthermore, all activity is transparent. Everyone can see the database. History can't be altered and the rules can't suddenly be changed. We have no real transparency into the stock market, banks, twitter.com. They can and do selectively edit their databases and change the rules at will. The public can't audit what they are doing. They public can audit the blockchain. The more our institutions become corrupt, the more important transparency and full inclusivity is.

peoplefromibiza wrote at 2021-11-30 17:51:56:

Out of curiosity I checked your account, and you have only posted in favour of web3 since the beginning (3 months ago).

It's a bit strange IMO when someone shows absolutely no doubt on a topic that is so divisive and controversial.

anyway: anyone on planet Earth can use the web too, proof is everybody already does.

evergrande wrote at 2021-11-30 18:18:16:

I have expressed doubt:

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=29371613

But even if that wasn't the case, so what? HN is overrepresented by people convinced web3 has no merit. That doesn't seem to be a problem (and IMO it isn't), but presenting arguments in favor is a problem?

Kbelicius wrote at 2021-11-30 18:20:48:

> Web3 is inclusive in the fullest sense of the term.

Only to those that hold the tokens. Web1 and Web2 seem to be more inclusive.

> Nothing. Anyone and everyone on planet Earth can use it. This is not true of traditional banking and other web2 services.

How is web2 more inaccessible than web3? Also banking is accessible to more people than the internet. The vast majority of unbanked aren't unbanked because they don't have access to banks but because they are so poor that they have no need for banks. How will crypto/web3 help those people?

> Furthermore, all activity is transparent.

Fuck no!

rfd4sgmk8u wrote at 2021-11-30 19:27:20:

> Furthermore, all activity is transparent.

https://polygonscan.com/

https://etherscan.io/

https://www.bscscan.com/

The transaction logs, events and spends are all public. It is very transparent.

Kbelicius wrote at 2021-11-30 19:41:34:

I wasn't saying that it wasn't. I was saying that I don't want all of my internet activity to be publicly available.

pcthrowaway wrote at 2021-11-30 19:46:55:

> Only to those that hold the tokens. Web1 and Web2 seem to be more inclusive.

Only to those who hold internet-capable computing devices. Newspapers seem to be more inclusive.

Wow, that sounds like a stupid comparison doesn't it.

Kbelicius wrote at 2021-11-30 19:51:33:

> Only to those who hold internet-capable computing devices.

And web1 and web2 are somehow not accessible to those people? How?