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Tokenization, Regulation and Expansion: Web3 Trends To Watch in 2023

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Web3 technologies are poised to become more mainstream this year, according to a treatise penned by a member of the World Economic Forum (WEF) ahead of the group's big annual meeting in Davos, Switzerland.

Samantha Weinberg, a WEF project specialist, lists four major trends in the Web3 space in a Jan. 4 post titled, "Going mainstream: four Web3 developments to watch in 2023." Despite recent cryptocurrency troubles, Weinberg says that blockchain-related tech is only going forward, with one of the key takeaways from the article being, "There will be more tokenization of assets, and increasingly mainstream use of blockchain technology."

Token-based economics can refer to processes where digital representations of assets are created on blockchains, which authenticate the transaction and ownership history of things like securities, stocks, bonds and real estate -- or possibly even other assets such as land, wine, art or other physical valuables.

"Tokenization can allow for almost any real-world asset to have a digital representation on a blockchain," Weinberg said. "The increased use of tokenization has the potential to revolutionize financial markets and most industries. 2023 will see continued increases in the use of tokenization, especially as more mainstream players like BlackRock and Goldman Sachs explore its possibilities. This could impact financial markets, but also other sectors with viable assets to digitize like real estate and entertainment as well."

Summaries of the other three key predictions include:

  1. Changing policy landscape: "There has been much discussion of regulation and policy approaches for the Web3 industry throughout 2022. Heading into 2023, it is likely this will continue with more concrete policy taking shape globally."
  2. Rise of decentralized social media: "One of the critical pillars of Web3 is the concept of decentralization -- the idea that there won't be middlemen managing things on the internet as we have now with big tech. This will probably mean a rise in the popularity of decentralized social media in 2023."
  3. Expansion of mainstream use cases: "The first three trends highlighted all point to 2023 being a year in which Web3 breaks further into the mainstream. As the technology matures there will be an increasing number of concrete use cases for it beyond those that currently excite early adopters."

Blockchain-related tech is obviously an important focus of the WEF, which has even created a Platform for Shaping the Future of Blockchain and Digital Assets, which it says was created to ensure equity, interoperability, transparency and trust in the governance of the tech for everyone in society to benefit from its transformative potential.

Specifically, the WEF said:

"The World Economic Forum is committed to helping ensure that blockchain securely decentralizes the transfer of information in ways that reduce corruption, increase trust and empower users," says the group in a mission statement.

However, the blockchain-based cryptocurrency market suffered some serious upheaval (called by some a "crypto winter") in late 2022, prompting a recent (Jan. 3) "Joint Statement on Crypto-Asset Risks to Banking Organizations" from three federal agencies that in part says:

"The events of the past year have been marked by significant volatility and the exposure of vulnerabilities in the crypto-asset sector," said the statement from the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. "These events highlight a number of key risks associated with crypto-assets and crypto-asset sector participants that banking organizations should be aware."

The joint statement lists many such risks and states, "It is important that risks related to the crypto-asset sector that cannot be mitigated or controlled do not migrate to the banking system."

The annual WEF meeting is scheduled to take place on Jan. 16-20 in Davos. The meeting convenes leaders from government, business and other "civil society" institutions to address the state of the world and discuss priorities for the year ahead. The group says the meeting provides a platform to engage in constructive, forward-looking dialogues and help find solutions through public-private cooperation. Others have said it's the place where global elites gather to work out the future direction of that "civil society."

About the Author

David Ramel is an editor and writer at Converge 360.

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