HOR-12 · Tech Horizons · Living entry
Learn Web3 & Decentralised Systems with any AI
Trust without a middleman
Web3 is the attempt to rebuild parts of the internet on decentralised foundations — blockchains, tokens and smart contracts — so that trust need not depend on a central authority. It is genuinely divisive, and this node deliberately gives the critics equal time, because much of the space has been hype and worse.
Approach it with curiosity and a healthy dose of scepticism. Set your level below.
§01
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HOR-12 · Web3 & Decentralised Systems
This prompt is scoped to Web3 & Decentralised Systems. Browse the full library to switch subjects.
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MODERNENCY PROMPT
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§02
A map of Web3
Trust without a middlemanThe pieces of the decentralised vision.
- Blockchain fundamentals — the shared, tamper-resistant ledger at the core.
- Smart contracts — code that executes agreements automatically.
- Digital assets & CBDCs — cryptocurrencies, tokens and central-bank digital money.
- Decentralised identity — controlling your own credentials.
- Critiques & risks — given real weight here, not treated as an afterthought.
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The canon
The ideas behind the technologyReal foundations.
- Public-key cryptography — the older maths that makes any of it possible.
- The Bitcoin whitepaper (2008) — Satoshi Nakamoto's design for decentralised digital cash.
- The blockchain — the core idea of a distributed, append-only ledger.
- Smart contracts — the term coined by Nick Szabo, later realised on platforms like Ethereum.
- Decentralised consensus — the mechanisms by which strangers agree without a central authority.
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The live debates
The debates — with the critics heardReal, sharp disagreements.
- Does decentralisation actually deliver? Or does it quietly recreate the middlemen it promised to remove?
- Environmental cost. The heavy energy use of some ("proof-of-work") systems.
- Useful, or mostly speculation and fraud? An honest question given the sector's record.
- CBDCs. Convenient digital money, or a tool for surveillance and control?
- Regulation. How to protect people without strangling genuine innovation.
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Where to start
A route inA route in — everything runs from the panel above.
- Run Orientation on "what a blockchain actually is" — the tech beneath the noise.
- Use Great Debates on whether decentralisation delivers on its promises.
- Connect to Cybersecurity and Economics.
- Read both the advocates and the sharpest critics — this field needs both.
Separate the technology from the speculation: the ideas are interesting; the market has been a minefield.