Imagine that your various needs and opportunities – from borrowing a stepladder for a couple of hours to earning extra money by pet-sitting while the owners are on vacation – could be fulfilled instantly, right after you put them in your “Wish List”. Despite the power and diversity of today’s platforms, they still fall short of delivering such seamless experiences.
This is due to the architectural limitations of the Web 2.0 approach, where fragments of information about us are scattered across countless platforms.
But what if we turned the internet "inside out"? Imagine everyone having a single personal "Internet account" where all your information – from bio and posts to capacity and wish lists – is stored and managed by you.
Could this shift and increased competition between thousands of platforms, perfectly match your capabilities and needs with those around you?
Could it help build connections and even combat the growing loneliness epidemic?
Read on to discover how Internet transformation and Wish-list technique could bring a sense of small-town community to the global world, fostering true freedom and creativity in our interactions.
The problem with the current Web 2.0 architecture is that platforms act like closed clubs, dividing users among themselves.
This data is available (with the user's permission, of course) to all platforms and AI-services competing to serve you.
Each match builds horizontal connections in the community, combating loneliness and making people happier.
We often think technology has already simplified our lives as much as possible, but the real revolution is still ahead. By flipping the Web 2.0 model inside out – where we store all our data in our own "Internet account" and let platforms compete to serve us best – we ignite a new phase in the development of a human-centric Internet.