Photo by Shubham Dhage on Unsplash
Think back for a second.
There was a time when having a computer at home was a big deal. Not a laptop, a boxy desktop that took forever to turn on. You used it to type documents, play Solitaire, or maybe burn a CD.
Then came the cellphone…at first, just for calls and texts. Eventually, it became a camera, then a calculator, then your main internet device.
Today? Your phone is your wallet. Your ID. Your TV. Your doctor’s clinic.
Your job interview.
Technology didn’t just evolve, it took over how we live.
And now, we’re at the edge of another shift.
Not a new phone, not a new app, but a new version of the internet itself.
It’s called Web3.
To understand why this matters (especially here in the Philippines), let’s rewind a bit.
Web1 was like a giant online encyclopedia. You could read, but you couldn’t talk back.
You visited websites to look up facts, check news, or read about celebrities.
Everything felt official, created by companies or institutions. If you wanted to be online, you needed to know a bit of code, have hosting, or pay someone to build you a website.
The big institutions — media, corporations, schools — they published. You consumed.
Then everything changed.
Web2 gave you a voice. Suddenly, you weren’t just reading, you were posting, sharing, reacting, and creating.
This was the rise of social media, apps, and the influencer generation. It wasn’t just about websites…it was about platforms. Platforms that connected people, businesses, ideas, and services.
What it looked like:
The platforms — Facebook, Google, Amazon. Yes, you could create content, but they owned the space, the rules, and the data. You traded privacy for convenience.
Now comes Web3 and here’s what makes it different:
If Web1 was a library, and Web2 was a social club, Web3 is like owning a key to your own digital house. You bring your identity with you. You decide how much to share. You’re not locked into any one app.
Let’s break it down in everyday terms:
Right now, every app you use creates a new “you”: One login for Facebook, another for your bank, another for Lazada. Forget the password? Reset it. Get hacked? Good luck.
In Web3: You carry one secure digital identity and it’s yours. It’s like a passport for the internet. No middleman needed.
Web2 platforms track everything — your clicks, likes, messages, even your location. You give them content, they profit from it.
In Web3: You choose what to share, with whom, and when. It’s like switching from being watched in a mall to locking your room door. Your data = your rules.
Ever tried selling art, writing, or doing freelance work online? The platforms take a cut. You work, they profit.
In Web3: If you earn online, you keep more of it. Payments can go directly to you, without banks, without delays, without crazy fees. It’s financial inclusion by design.
Here’s the truth:
Web3 isn’t just for tech bros in Silicon Valley.
It’s for countries like ours, where people are young, online, creative, and looking for fairer systems.
You don’t need to understand the tech right away.
You just need to stay curious.
Ask:
Because here’s the thing: Web3 isn’t just about technology.
It’s about trust, freedom, and fairness.
We’ve come a long way…from big boxy computers, to pocket-sized phones, to an internet that lives in our hands.
Now, we’re moving into a version of the internet where you’re not just the user, you’re part of the system.
And whether you’re a student in Baguio, a sari-sari store owner in Leyte, or a policymaker in Manila…Web3 could give you new tools to protect your data, grow your income, and claim your space in the digital world.
We’re making Web3 understandable, not intimidating.
For more plain-spoken guides like this, follow us and visit kryptocompass.xyz — where we decode the next digital chapter for you.
From Computers to Cellphones to Web3: The Next Shift in How We Use the Internet was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.


