The Economist - USA (2022-01-29)

(Antfer) #1
TheEconomistJanuary29th 2022 Business 55

doeswith Android) or cloud­computing
data centres(including those owned by
Amazon,MicrosoftandGoogle).
The web3 movementisareactionto
perhapsthegreatestcentralisationofall:
thatoftheinternet.AsChrisDixon,who
oversees web3 investments at a16z, ex­
plainsit,theoriginal,decentralisedweb
lastedfrom 1990 toabout2005.Thisweb1,
callit,waspopulatedbyflatwebpagesand
governedbyopentechnicalrulesputto­
getherbystandardsbodies.Thenextitera­
tion,web2,broughttheriseoftechgiants
suchasAlphabetandMeta,whichman­
agedtoamasshugecentraliseddatabases
ofuserinformation.Web3,inMrDixon’s
telling,“combinesthedecentralised,com­
munity­governedethosofweb1withthe
advanced,modernfunctionalityofweb2”.
Thisispossiblethankstoblockchains,
which turnthecentralised databases to
whichbigtechowesitspowerintoa com­
mongood thatcanbe usedby anybody
without permission. Blockchains are a
specialtype ofledger thatisnotmain­
tainedcentrally by a single entity(asa
bankcontrolsallitscustomersaccounts)
butcollectivelybyitsusers.Blockchains
haveoutgrowncryptocurrencies,theirear­
liestapplication,andspreadintonfts and
othersortsof“decentralisedfinance”(De­
Fi).Nowtheyareincreasinglyunderpin­
ningnon­financialservices.
Theportfolioofa16z offersa glimpseof
thiswildnewworld. Italreadyincludes
morethan 60 startups,atleasta dozenof
whicharevaluedatover$1bn.Manyarede­
velopingtheinfrastructureforweb3.Al­
chemyprovidestoolsforotherstobuild
blockchain applications, much as cloud
computingmakesiteasyfordevelopersto
createweb­basedservices.Nym’s“mixnet”
isa decentralisednetworkthatmixesup
messagessothatnooneelsecantellwhois
sendingwhattowhom.
Othera16zbetsareservingend­users.
DapperLabscreatesnftapplicationssuch
asnbaTopShot,awebsitewheresports
fanscanbuyandselldigitalcollectables
likedepictionsofkeymomentsinbasket­


ball games. Syndicate helps investment
clubsorganisethemselvesinto“decentral­
isedautonomousorganisations”governed
by“smartcontracts”,whicharerulesen­
codedinsoftwareandbakedintoa block­
chain.AndSound.xyzallowsmusiciansto
mintnfts tomakemoney.
Whatallthesecompanieshaveincom­
mon,explainsMrDixon,isthatitishard
for them to lock in customers. Unlike
GoogleandMetatheydonotcontroltheir
users’data. OpenSea(inwhicha16zalso
hasa stake)andAlchemyarejustpipesto
theblockchain.Iftheircustomersareun­
happy,theycanmovetoa competingser­
vice.Evenifhewanted,hecouldnotkeep
themfromleaving,saysNikilViswanath­
an,Alchemy’sboss.“Asa business,I would
lovetohaveproprietarychokepoints.But
therearen’tany.Wetriedtofindthem.”
Theideaisthatthismakesweb3com­
paniestryhardertosatisfycustomersand
keepinnovating.Whethertheycandothis
whilealsomakingpotsofmoneyisanoth­
ermatter.It isnotclearhowmuchdemand
existsfortrulydecentralisedprojects.That
wastheproblemofearlyweb3offerings
(thencalled“peer­to­peer”or“thedecen­
tralisedweb”).ServicessuchasDiaspora
andMastodon,twosocialnetworks,never
reallytookoff.Theirsuccessorscouldface
thesameproblem.AservicelikeOpenSea
wouldbemuchfaster,cheaperandeasier
touse“withalltheweb3partsgone”,says
MrMarlinspike.
Amore fundamentalproblem isthat
evenifweb3workedassmoothlyasitsim­
mediatepredecessor,itmaynevertheless
lenditselftocentralisation.Lock­in,reck­
onsMrMarlinspike,tendstoemergeal­
mostautomatically.Thehistoryofthein­
ternethasshownthatcollectivelydevel­
oped technical protocols evolve more
slowlythantechnologydevisedbya single
firm.“Ifsomethingistrulydecentralised,
itbecomesverydifficulttochange,andof­
tenremainsstuckintime,”hewrites.That
creates opportunities:“Asure recipefor
successhasbeentotakea 1990’sprotocol
thatwasstuckintime,centraliseit,andit­
eratequickly.”
Centralisationandlock­in havebeen
incrediblylucrative.Infact,a16zhasmade
billionsfromMeta,inwhichit wasanearly
investor;oneofa16z’sfounders,MarcAn­
dreessen,sitsonMeta’sboardtothisday.
Web3’s vcboosters maybe countingon
somethinglikethishappeningagain.And
toa degree,italreadyis.Despitebeinga
relativelyrecentphenomenon,web3isex­
hibitingsignsofcentralisation.Becauseof
the complexity of thetechnology, most
peoplecannotinteractdirectlywithblock­
chains—orfindittootedious.Ratherthey
relyonmiddlemen,suchasOpenSeafor
consumersandAlchemyfordevelopers.
AlbertWenger ofUnion Square Ven­
tures,avcfirmthatstartedinvestingin

web3firmsa fewyearsago,pointstoother
potential“pointsofrecentralisation”.One
isthattheownershipofthecomputing
powerthatkeepsmanyblockchainsupto
date is often very concentrated, which
givesthese“miners”,astheyarecalled,un­
dueinfluence.Itcouldevenallowthemto
takeoverablockchain.Inothersystems
theownershipoftokensisheavilyskewed:
at recently launched web3 projects, be­
tween30%and40%isownedbythepeo­
plewholaunchedthem.
These dynamics, combined with the
latestcrashthatmaycoolinvestors’appe­
titeforallthingscrypto,suggestthatweb3
willnotdislodgeweb2.Instead,thefuture
maybelongtoa mixofthetwo,withweb3
occupyingcertainniches.Whetherornot
peoplekeepsplurgingonnfts,suchto­
kensmakea lotofsenseinthemetaverse,
wheretheycouldbeusedtotrackowner­
shipofdigitalobjectsandmovethemfrom
onevirtualworldtoanother.Web3mayal­
soplaya roleinthecreatoreconomy,an­
otherbuzzyconcept.LiJinofAtelier,avc
firm,pointsoutthatnfts makeiteasier
for creators of online content to make
money.Inthislimitedway,atleast,even
themastersofweb2seethewritingonthe
wall:onJanuary20thbothMetaandTwit­
terintegratednfts intotheirplatforms.n

More than a token effort
Crypto venture-capital deal value, $bn

Source:PitchBook

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Rest of world
United States

Softwaredevelopment

Going codeless


I


n 2018  a field technician working for Tel­
stra,  an  Australian  telecoms  firm,  built
an app that unified 70 messaging systems
for  reporting  phone­line  problems.  The
technician did this despite having no cod­
ing  experience.  The  interface  may  look
cluttered: the landing page jams in 150 but­
tons  and  a  local­news  ticker—the  app
equivalent  of  an  airplane  cockpit,  quips
Charles  Lamanna  of  Microsoft,  who  over­
sees  the  software  titan’s  Power  Apps  plat­
form that made it possible. But it has been
a hit. Some 1,300 other Telstra technicians
employ it, saving the firm an annual $12m.
Professional  developers  (pro  devs)
might poke fun at the technician’s diyapp.
But  the  trend  it  exemplifies  is  no  joke.
Since  well  before 2017,  when  Chris  Wan­
strath, co­founder of GitHub, a coding­col­
laboration site, declared that “the future of
coding  is  no  coding  at  all”,  so­called  low
code/no  code  (lc/nc)  tools  have  bur­
geoned.  They  allow  anyone  to  write  soft­
ware using drag­and­drop visual interfaces
alone (no code) or with a bit of code creep­

Firms are letting all workers write
software, not just the geek elite
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