Web3 for Business
Practical insights, frameworks, and mental models for building real businesses on Web3.
Many DAOs call themselves decentralized. In practice, they are often structured in a way that protects the founding team early while leaving the risk with the community. That is where a structural fla...
Anyone launching a crypto project is not just building a product. They are building an economic system. That is exactly why success depends not only on technology and marketing, but above all on suppl...
The traditional internet moves information. For a long time, value transfer was different. Trust, ownership, and control had to be secured. That is why centralized systems such as banks, registries, a...
Many crypto projects sell you vision, technology, and “community.” But what often moves the price the most doesn’t get the spotlight: the release schedule. When large amounts of tokens suddenly become...
Many DAOs allow their communities to vote—but not to truly control. The reason is structural: the actual application often runs outside the blockchain, on AWS or other cloud providers. The Internet Co...
For entrepreneurs, motivation is not a soft factor but a performance lever. Comparing traditional companies with DAOs shows how stake (tokens) and governance voting rights fundamentally change behavio...
For decades, digital scarcity was considered technically impossible because digital goods can be copied endlessly at virtually no cost. With Bitcoin, Satoshi Nakamoto proved the opposite. For the firs...
Forecasts estimate annual cybercrime damages of around $10.5 trillion by 2025. Ransomware is the most visible threat, but silent data theft is far more dangerous. This exposes a structural weakness in...
“Fair launch” sounds like equal opportunity. In practice, many projects start with pre-launch deals: early token allocations, vesting schedules, and post-launch sell pressure. This comparison breaks d...