Web3 Needs Paradigm Shift from “Users” to “Builders”

Crypto has a perception problem. A large number of people don’t know what cryptocurrencies and web3 are, or see crypto as complex and intimidating. In a recent global YouGov survey commissioned by Consensys (The Global Survey on Crypto and Web3), 43% of respondents said they didn't understand what cryptocurrencies were, and only 8% said they understood the concept “web3.” Meanwhile, a proportion of respondents felt they needed to have skills in financial trading (32%) or software engineering (20%) to participate in web3. These beliefs, however, are misconceptions. While the crypto and web3 ecosystem have work to do on the user interface, advanced knowledge is not required, and these misconceptions are barriers to broad adoption.

This perception problem stems largely from an overfocus on “money crypto”—buying, holding, lending, and trading tokens as investable assets. Coverage of the collapse of centralized crypto companies like FTX, ecosystem failures, and an intense interest in the rise and fall of token prices generate a lot of interest as clickbait; but what this coverage ignores is that this industry is so much more than money crypto, it comprises a rich ecosystem of protocols, organizations and individuals building groundbreaking new technology and software. The rest of this industry is what we mean when we say tech crypto. Tech crypto is about advancing open peer-to-peer networks and the software that runs on them; it’s a new kind of global public infrastructure. Tech crypto is about empowering people and building the Internet of tomorrow and is what people refer to when they use the term web3.

The perception challenge is that money crypto dominates the public discourse, clouding people’s perception of tech crypto and crowding out the discourse on web3. The negative perceptions of money crypto undercut web3’s ability to be seen as a potential solution to many of the problems people have with the current internet: social platforms that target users and sell their data, data leaks and privacy violations, difficulty participating in value generation from online activity, fragmented identity, all collectively known as web 2.0.

Is Education the Answer?

The gap in public understanding and resulting barriers to entry indicate there is a place for better education. New initiatives such as MetaMask Learn and the many Learn and Earn programs now available are examples of resources that may help to bridge the knowledge gap.

However, education isn’t the whole story. Beyond educational platforms, the crypto industry needs to play an active role in supporting crypto adoption through collaboration and community building, and by reframing its mission and how it communicates with people who are considering entering the crypto ecosystem.