| Early blockchains have also solved the problems they were designed to solve. For example: - Bitcoin offers a transferrable store of value which cannot be inflated by governments, - Stablecoins, thanks to being cross-border, are often used in e.g. Argentina where the local currency is unstable and it's not legal to buy dollars, - Proof of Humanity + universal basic income has provided extra income to Argentinian people (e.g. heard of someone who was able to purchase a ticket to visit their family for Christmas thanks to crypto UBI), - Crypto has been used to send remittances to economically unstable places (Lebanon, Turkey, Venezuela) - Gitcoin has provided public goods funding and advanced our conception of mechanism design, - Helium has created a new 5G network that people can actually roam onto, - NFTs have provided a new funding model for artists (who create public goods), - Zcash and Monero have allowed for fully private digital transfers, - Dark Forest (https://zkga.me/) has been an amusing game, - Snapshot has helped create a delegative voting system that governs a $3B treasury, These might not be problems that you face or believe are important, but all these are examples of intended problems being solved. P.S. the tone of your comment made me a little sad :( |
Either purely technical solutions, or previously solved problems.
For example, IoT scale global 5G networks you can roan into? That's a solved issue already. Same for programming bounties, proof of humanity, UBI, transferrable assets (though Bitcoin is in some ways more transferable) etc...
Others are fully technical problems, like fully private digital transfers.
Others yet are pretty much just temporary workaround. The fact that you can send remittances to Lebanon or Venezuela was never inherently problematic because of the instability of their currency, rather, it's because the government (in some cases other governments) decided to make it more difficult.
If a government wanted to, they could make sending remittances via crypto just as difficult as by any other way.
NFTs as a funding model is not inherently different from the existing comission and copyright system. What NFTs brought was hype, which made people who wouldn't previously comission artwork to now do so. Attesting ownership or transfering ownership of a piece of art with a contemporary author is not more difficult without than with NFTs. Especially because you still need to trust whoever minted the NFT.
There are few, actual, real world problems that have been solved by Web3 tech. I wish it wasn't the case, but it's true.
The fundamental issue is that Web3 tech can't fully replace centralised institutions. So we need to build centralised institutions anyways. If those fail, it can provide some palliation, as long as they don't fail so hard the government tries to fight it. So in the end, it doesn't truly solve any problem in the real world, though it can in some situations act as a Bandaid.