Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin recently expressed concerns about the current internet environment, believing that its rising “toxicity” stems from the shift from the non-profit, interest-driven model of Web 1.0 to the algorithm-driven, profit-motivated, and centralized control of Web 2.0. His views have reignited discussions about who truly controls the internet and how it affects user behavior, providing a theoretical foundation for the Web3 community to build a healthier digital space.
From Web 1.0 to Web 2.0: The Fundamental Transformation of Internet Experience
Buterin profoundly contrasted the two main stages of internet development, Web 1.0 and Web 2.0, to explain why the current online experience has become so different.
In the early days of Web 1.0, the internet was mainly composed of static web pages operated by individuals or small communities, with almost no profit pressure. “Websites had no strong profit incentive,” Buterin pointed out, which made the content more pure and genuine. Users had to actively search for content they were interested in and communicate with like-minded individuals through forums and specialized websites, which filled the internet with more purposeful and deeper interactions.
The internet of today, the Web 2.0 era, is completely different. Algorithms dominate content distribution, passively pushing content to users. This model has given rise to short, emotional, and trend-chasing content, as they can maximize engagement with the general public and extend users' online time. In the words of Buterin, the current internet is “built for the average person”; it leans more towards simple memes and short videos rather than profound discussions.
Algorithm and Profit-Seeking: The Two Major Sources of Toxicity
Buterin believes that the current predicament of the internet is not caused by a single factor, but rather is a “mixture” of various pressures, among which two driving forces are particularly prominent:
- Profit Motives and Incentive Structures: Most of today's internet platforms are owned by tech giants, whose primary goal is commercial profit rather than community well-being. This “flawed incentive structure” leads platforms to sacrifice user welfare for profitability. By controlling algorithms, advertising, and user data, these billionaires have fundamentally altered the way platforms operate, undermining the early internet's open, user-driven spirit.
- Algorithm-driven and content superficialization: The core of Web 2.0 is algorithms, designed to maximize user retention time, which inevitably leads to a decline in content quality. Algorithms favor content that can provoke immediate emotional reactions, making it difficult for serious and in-depth viewpoints to stand out in the vast sea of passive content, exacerbating the superficiality and fragmentation of online communication.
Web3 Solutions Behind Vitalik Buterin's Views
Buterin's remarks are not just a critique of the current situation, but also provide a theoretical foundation for the decentralized vision of Ethereum and the Web3 community. His views precisely highlight two core flaws of Web2: centralized control (platforms controlled by a few billionaires) and an unhealthy incentive structure (platforms profit instead of users).
To solve these problems, the Web3 community is working to build a healthier internet through the following ways:
- Decentralized Social (DeSo): Platforms like Farcaster and Lens Protocol aim to store user data on decentralized networks rather than being controlled by a single company. This allows users to truly own their data and content, fundamentally eliminating the risks of censorship and data breaches.
- Transparent incentive mechanism: By using a tokenized model, Web3 platforms can reward users who create high-quality content and make beneficial contributions. This new incentive structure is expected to return value to the community rather than be monopolized by the platform.
- User-controlled algorithms: The vision of Web3 is to make algorithms open source and transparent, allowing users to choose their own content sorting methods. This breaks the absolute control that centralized platforms have over information flow, making users the true masters of the content ecosystem.
Conclusion
Buterin's insights profoundly reveal the fundamental contradictions of the current internet: on one hand, there is efficient and convenient connectivity, while on the other hand, there is an increasingly severe “toxification” and fragmentation. His critique is not just an observation, but a call to the Web3 community. The debate on how to build a healthier and more open digital space continues, and the ultimate solution may lie in returning control of the internet back to each user, thereby ending the era dominated by centralized platforms.
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