Web3 Explained for Beginners: Your - AI Video Analysis

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This is a great intro! I love how they're framing it as a complete reimagining, not just an update. It makes you realize how much the internet has already changed and how much more it could.
Okay, I like this game plan – history, the problem, then the solution. Breaking it down like this makes it feel way more approachable. The 'where we've been' bit is crucial for understanding the 'where we're going.'
Web 1 as read-only, Web 2 as read-write – that makes so much sense! It’s funny how we take the interactive nature of Web 2 for granted, but it really was a huge leap from those static pages. I'm curious to see what 'click' means for Web 3.

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The evolution of the internet is presented in three distinct phases, starting with Web 1.0, characterized by static, read-only pages in the 1990s [0:47]. This evolved into Web 2.0 around 2004, the interactive, social web we recognize today, where users are creators of content [0:47]. The core insight here is that while Web 2.0 empowered users to write and share, it introduced a significant drawback: the lack of true ownership over their created content and data [1:34]. This era's "free" services came at the cost of users' data becoming the product for large platforms [1:58].
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Video summary will appear here after you start watching

The evolution of the internet is presented in three distinct phases, starting with Web 1.0, characterized by static, read-only pages in the 1990s [0:47]. This evolved into Web 2.0 around 2004, the interactive, social web we recognize today, where users are creators of content [0:47]. The core insight here is that while Web 2.0 empowered users to write and share, it introduced a significant drawback: the lack of true ownership over their created content and data [1:34]. This era's "free" services came at the cost of users' data becoming the product for large platforms [1:58].
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