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This process is extremely difficult and will take decades

Posted: Sun Feb 09, 2025 5:14 am
by Rina7RS
While today’s web is built on open standards, much of it is closed and proprietary. Amazon, Facebook, and Google use similar technologies, but they are not designed to translate into one another—just like Ford wheels were not designed to fit into GM chassis. Furthermore, these companies are very resistant to cross-integrating their systems or sharing their data. But these moves could enhance the overall value of the “digital economy,”

An the more valuable and interoperable the Metaverse becomes, the harder it will be to build industry-wide consensus around topics like data security, data persistence, forward-compatible code evolution, and transactions. In addition, the Metaverse will require entirely new rules for censorship, communications controls, regulatory enforcement, tax reporting, prevention of online radicalization, and many of the challenges we are still grappling with today.

While the establishment of standards often involves actual poland mobile database meetings, negotiations, and debates, standards for the Metaverse will not be established in advance. The standards process will hide this chaos and opportunity, with meetings and opinions changing based on consensus.

To draw an analogy for the Metaverse, consider SimCity. Ideally, the "mayor" i.e., the player would first design their metropolis, then build it out from day one to their final vision. But in the game, as in real life, you don't just "build" a 10MM-person city. You start with a small town and optimize it first e., where are the roads, where are the schools, utility capacity, etc.