šŸ§  [Brain Food #5] We Donā€™t Truly Own Anything Digitally šŸ«°

šŸŒ Yat Siuā€™s TED Talk On Why We Need Digital Property Rights

GM Readers! ā˜€ļø

Welcome to the 5th issue of Evolving Internet Insights: Brainfood ā€” a weekly deep dive into a relevant emerging tech topic.

This week we are revisiting the topic of the Metaverse after listening to a great TED Talk by Yat Siu, Co-founder and CEO Animoca Brands (one of the largest blockchain gaming companies in the world).

Now that all the hype has subsided, we have some mind space and breathing room to understand the importance of things like digital property rights and how they are a critical ingredient to build a more inclusive and prosperous digital world.

Thanks for reading!

Liang and Dan šŸ™Œ

Image Made with AI

šŸ§  Brain Food

One focus topic to feed your brain.

šŸŒĀ Revisiting the Metaverse

Yat Siu, Co-founder and CEO of Animoca Brands (one of the largest Web3 gaming companies today) believes that the future of all digital activity will converge in the Metaverse. It will offer new opportunities for value creation and innovation across many different industries, including gaming, social networking, education, and commerce. The Metaverse represents an evolving frontier where societies will increasingly spend more time both for entertainment, leisure, and economic activity.

But what is the Metaverse?

When people talk about the Metaverse, they often debate the semantics of what the word actually means. Some people think itā€™s about gaming, others think it about virtual reality.

Matthew Ball, a thought leader and investor in the Metaverse industry, described the Metaverse as ā€œa massively scaled and interoperable network of real-time rendered 3D virtual worlds and environments which can be experienced synchronously and persistently by an effectively unlimited number of users with an individual sense of presence, and with continuity of data, such as identity, history, entitlements, objects, communications, and payments.ā€

Given this sticking point on wording, the discussions around the Metaverse and all of its components usually go nowhere because people have different definitions of the Metaverse.

šŸŒ³Ā This is the classic ā€œmissing the forest for the treesā€ phenomenon.Ā 

Broadly speaking, we think of the Metaverse as the ā€œ3D Internet,ā€ but the ā€œ3Dā€ part is less important than the ā€œInternetā€ part because the Internet is where we increasingly spend our time across all aspects of our lives.Ā 

When you see the word ā€œmetaverse,ā€ replacing it with the Internet is a good reframing because at heart the metaverse is really about the internet and its next evolution. Said another way, the Internet is an early version of the Metaverse and how the Internet works today is critical to understand.

šŸ“œĀ The Importance of Digital Property Rights

At heart digital property rights is about ownership.Ā 

In his TED Talk, Siu said ā€œwhenever we are online, we accrue value to networks that do not belong to us.ā€ This concept of ownership is key to understanding the fundamental difference between Web2 and Web3.

In the Age of AI, this means we generate data that we do not own for platforms that do end up owning that data. Siu reasons that anything we do online can be reduced to data of some sort ā€“ the Tweet you post, the image you share, the content you create ā€“ all of it is data of some sort.

Siu believes that for the Metaverse to be accessible to all and not look like the closed off ā€œwalled gardensā€ of Web2, the Metaverse must be open, transparent, and have strong digital property rights.

šŸŽ”The logic goes something like this: ownership of digital assets (data, etc) enables control over those assets, which means economic freedom because users can choose who and how others can use their data, which unlocks economic opportunities and allows more individuals to participate in the economic value that they create.

A good analogy to describe this concept further is the difference between renting your home versus owning your home.

  • When you own your home, you tend to make improvements which adds value to the property and you get to capture that value if you sell the home.

  • In contrast, when you rent a home, none of the value creation accrues to you.

Siu sees a similar relationship when we participate on digital platforms. A content platform gets more valuable when its users create more content, but the users do not capture any of that value because they donā€™t really own the content.

In the chart below, we can use intellectual property (IP) protection as a proxy for digital property rights because they both reinforce the idea of ownership. Countries with strong property rights fare better from a GDP per capita perspective than countries with weaker property rights.

The current model of ownership in the digital world however doesnā€™t have strong property rights. All the data users create is governed and controlled by a handful of technology companies (remember, anything on the Internet that is digital can be reduced to data of some sortā€“data that is owned by the platforms we use to create on).

Using market capitalization as a proxy for GDP, the worldā€™s top ten GDPs globally would also theoretically include two technology companies, Apple and Microsoftā€“meaning these companies are bigger than the vast majority of economies in the world.

Looking at it from another angle, the S&P 500ā€™s gains since January 2023 were driven by just five technology companies. They are: Apple, Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, and Nvidia.

šŸ§Ā So What?

The internet is a place we are spending more and more of our time (and money) on. And itā€™s not just for entertainment, but also for work and everything in between. If we look at the daily time spent using the Internet, itā€™s already a large part of our time awake and most of the work day.

If the Internet and our digital lives are such a critical part of our actual lives, then Siuā€™s argument for ensuring the Internet and, in the future, the Metaverse, have digital property rights that isnā€™t governed (or less governed) by platforms is an important topic to think about.

šŸŒšŸ“œšŸ™

Further Reading List šŸ“š

šŸ—³ Weā€™d Love your Feedback

What did you think of today's issue?

Login or Subscribe to participate in polls.

šŸ™ Shameless Asks

It takes us days to put this together, sharing it takes you 19.45 seconds šŸ˜˜

An easy way to support us and the newsletter is through the referral program.

āš”ļø Share Evolving Internet Insights with a friend and ask them to subscribe

āš”ļø Share on Twitter and Linkedin with a short note

āš”ļø Share on your company Slack/Teams channels and communities

DISCLAIMER: This post is provided strictly for educational and informational purposes only. Nothing written in this post should be taken as financial advice or advice of any kind. The content of this post are the opinions of the authors and not representative of other parties. Empower yourself, DYOR (do your own research).

Join the conversation

or to participate.