> even countries which don't look like dictatorships like Thailand Isn't Thailand a straight-up military dictatorship?
> (2) freezing an asset like impounding/towing a car away and the owner can eventually get the car back later (e.g. after Russia stops the war) ? At least in Europe AFAIK. The rationale is to prevent, at least…
For context, the definition of web 3.0 from Tim Berners-Lee gives a good idea an the level of hazyness of this concept: > People keep asking what Web 3.0 is. I think maybe when you've got an overlay of scalable vector…
Yes, fifteen to twenty years ago, it was used to refer to the emphasis on user-generated content and the generalization of social media.
> The hazy vision of new decentralized internet, built on the blockchain Ten years ago, web 3.0 was supposed to be the semantic web (whatever happened to this fad).
Feedback from Qatar is always taken with a grain of salt given the long history of Akbar Al Baker using fallacious pretexts to engage in ruthless contractual fights.
> even countries which don't look like dictatorships like Thailand Isn't Thailand a straight-up military dictatorship?
> (2) freezing an asset like impounding/towing a car away and the owner can eventually get the car back later (e.g. after Russia stops the war) ? At least in Europe AFAIK. The rationale is to prevent, at least…
For context, the definition of web 3.0 from Tim Berners-Lee gives a good idea an the level of hazyness of this concept: > People keep asking what Web 3.0 is. I think maybe when you've got an overlay of scalable vector…
Yes, fifteen to twenty years ago, it was used to refer to the emphasis on user-generated content and the generalization of social media.
> The hazy vision of new decentralized internet, built on the blockchain Ten years ago, web 3.0 was supposed to be the semantic web (whatever happened to this fad).
Feedback from Qatar is always taken with a grain of salt given the long history of Akbar Al Baker using fallacious pretexts to engage in ruthless contractual fights.