https://www.computing.co.uk/ctg/news/3036546/decentralising-the-web-the-key-takeaways
Decentralising the web: The key takeaways
The Decentralized Web Summit is over - what's next?
Earlier this month a rather unusual tech event took place in San Francisco.
The Decentralized Web Summit played host to a gathering of web luminaries such as Sir Tim Berners-Lee, Brewster Kahle and Vint Cerf. On top of that, activists and authors and screenwriters such as Jennifer Stisa Granick, Emili Jacobi, Mike Judge and Cory Doctorow put in an appearance, as did cryptocurrency pioneers like Zooko Wilcox, blockchain developers, and academics.
Then, there was what the Guardian's John Harris calls the Punk Rock Internet - companies like MaidSafe and Blockstack who play by their own decentralised rules.
Oh, and there was a sprinkling of techies from Microsoft, Google (Vint Cerf and others) and Mozilla in attendance too, along with a handful of venture capitalists looking for opportunities.
Uniting this diverse selection of delegates was the challenge of fixing the centralising tendencies of the internet and web.
Simply put, the internet's reliance on centralised hubs of servers and data centres means that the more servers you control the more power you have, with all the negative consequences that follow from the creation of data-haves and data-have-nots.
To redress the balance, data needs to be freed from silos with control handed back to users, but how to do that while retaining the convenience and ease-of-use of the current web?
Aside from the inevitable resistance by the powers that be, this turns out to be quite the technical challenge.
One task among a set of complex interlocking challenges is to separate data from the applications that use it. People could then store their personal data where they choose, granting or limiting access by applications as they please. For example, Berners-Lee's Solid platform enables everyone to have multiple 'pods' for their data allowing for fine-grained control.
Another element is authentication, ensuring that the data owner really is who they say they are, while ensuring real identities remain private by default.
Networking needs to be peer-to-peer rather than hub-and-spoke, with copies of files stored across multiple machines for redundancy and speed of throughput in a manner that users of torrent-based file-sharing services will be familiar with, but adding far more control and performance features.
And above all it will need to be easy to use, low latency and simple for developers to create decentralised applications for.
Computing contacted a number of contributors to the Summit before and after the event and asked about their take on progress towards a viable decentralised web.