1. Web 3.0 promises to make the Internet more
intuitive, more useful, and more personalized. And it’s already on its way. Web
1.0, as it’s called, can be thought of as a library. It was the infancy of the
web where sites essentially brought you information and you consumed it. Web 2.0
allowed the user to interact with that media. Now instead of just reading an
article, you could comment on it, post a video about it, and otherwise involve
yourself with the post. The Internet was now something of a social club. With
Web 3.0, the stakes are promised to be bigger. Web 3.0 will allow our devices
to take action and interpret information based on the users’ preferences and
personality. Instead of browsing a dozen websites to figure out where to have dinner
and see a movie next Friday night, on Web 3.0 you’ll be able to tell your
device what you want to do and it will search the entire web to find results that
are relevant to you. So, in this example, it may bring back a result in the
form of a specific Mexican restaurant near your favorite movie theatre that’s
playing the latest thriller (your favorite type of movie). It might even give
you the time the movie is playing and how long it would take to drive from the
restaurant to the movie theatre. In Web 2.0 we use the power of social networking
and crowdsourcing to find and do things, but in Web 3.0 we’ll be able to use
the “intelligence” of our devices and the web to personalize things to us. Will
all this personalization kill our privacy? Will we have to give up our privacy
to use this new technology? That is yet to be determined. A writer on Medium suggests
that Web 3.0 creates the opportunity for an Internet that is more pro-privacy
and less monopolized (by web giants like Facebook, Amazon, and Google) because
information will be back in the hands of the users (see the article: https://medium.com/@matteozago/why-the-web-3-0-matters-and-you-should-know-about-it-a5851d63c949).
It was my understanding that the author thought that Web 3.0 technologies would
run separate from current technologies owned by large companies. For instance,
we wouldn’t need a Google search engine. Instead we’d have some private search database
that only we had access to. From there we could share our information with
other companies in exchange for information – but only that information we
chose to share. It’s the idea of opting in instead of opting out. How
futuristic Web 3.0 gets is yet to be seen, but once need only look around to
see the future is upon us. The “Internet of Things” has already provided us
with smart thermostats that get to know our preferences and printers that
automatically send us ink based on learned usage. Whatever challenges it
brings, Web 3.0 will be exciting to discover. (Main Source: https://computer.howstuffworks.com/web-305.htm)