Web3 How the Internet Evolved

The internet did not arrive fully formed. It grew through three major phases — each one changing how people create, share, and own things online. Understanding this history makes Web3's purpose crystal clear.

The Three Phases: A Quick Map

Web1 (1990–2004)       Web2 (2004–2020)       Web3 (2020–now)
  Read Only          Read + Write            Read + Write + Own
  ──────────         ──────────────          ─────────────────
  Static pages       Social media            Blockchain apps
  No interaction     Platforms own data      Users own data
  Dial-up era        Smartphone era          Wallet era

Web1 — The Read-Only Web

Early websites were like digital newspapers. You visited a page, read it, and left. You could not comment, post, or interact.

Think of it like a bulletin board on a wall. You read the notices. You put nothing up.

Key Traits of Web1

  • Pages were static — they looked the same for everyone
  • Content was made by a small group of companies or developers
  • No user accounts, no personalization, no logins
  • Examples: Early Yahoo, basic news websites

Web2 — The Read-Write Web

Around 2004, the internet became interactive. Anyone could post, comment, like, and share. Social media exploded. Apps became powerful. Smartphones connected billions of people.

But there was a hidden cost. Every time you posted a photo or message, the platform kept it. Your data became their product.

Key Traits of Web2

  • Users create content — but platforms own it
  • Free services funded by advertising and selling user data
  • A handful of companies control most of the web (Google, Meta, Amazon)
  • Accounts can be banned or suspended at any time

The Web2 Business Model — Explained Simply

Imagine a shopping mall that lets you set up a free stall. Millions of people come to your stall. But the mall owns the building, sets the rules, takes a cut of your sales, and can kick you out overnight.

That is exactly how Web2 platforms work. Your audience, your content, your income — all sitting on someone else's land.

Web3 — The Read-Write-Own Web

Web3 adds a third capability: ownership. Users own their data, their digital assets, and even a share of the platforms they use.

Instead of a shopping mall owned by one company, Web3 is like a market in a public square. No owner. Everyone participates and everyone has rights.

Key Traits of Web3

  • Users own their accounts (stored in a crypto wallet, not on a server)
  • Platforms run on code, not company decisions
  • Assets (money, art, identity) cannot be taken away by a platform
  • Communities can vote on how the platform changes

Side-by-Side Comparison

EraWho CreatesWho OwnsWho Controls
Web1Developers onlyWebsite ownersWebsite owners
Web2EveryonePlatformsBig tech companies
Web3EveryoneUsersCode + community

Why This Evolution Matters

Each era of the web solved a problem from the previous one. Web2 made the internet participatory. Web3 makes it fair.

When you understand this progression, Web3 stops feeling like hype and starts feeling like a logical next step — giving people the rights they should have had all along.

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