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What is Web 3.0
#1


[Image: web-30-la-gi-tim-hieu-ve-web-30-786340.jpg]

1. Probably another buzzword like Web 2.0 for marketing purposes. Web 3.0 is referred to as the Semantic Web, in which the web itself will be used as a database with more intelligent search engines, filtering tags and where the information will be widgetized. 
2. Web 3.0 is a term used to describe the future of the World Wide Web. Following the introduction of the phrase “Web 2.0” as a description of the recent evolution of the Web, many technologists, journalists, and industry leaders have used the term “Web 3.0” to hypothesize about a future wave of Internet innovation.
3. Based on the development of semantic web. 
4. Web 3.0 describes demand-orientated information-, communication-, and transaction processes within the Net Economy. Due to these processes, the consumer and the demand via individual registration-, and specification systems represent the starting point for related e-request-, and e-customization processes predominantly carried out by means of e-desk (request) or modified e-shop platforms. 
5. Also called the semantic Web, it is an extension of the World Wide Web where it can be expressed a natural language understandable and usable by software agents, thus permitting finding, sharing and integrating information easily. 
6. Web 3.0 can be considered as an evolution of Web 2.0, which in turn can be roughly seen as a service-oriented Web, enabling and encouraging user participation and collaboration. There is no agreement about the specific features characterizing Web 3.0, but many reaserchers agree on the major role that semantic technologies and personalization techniques play in it. In this perspective, Web 3.0 can thus be viewed as a semantic and personalized version of Web 2.0. 
7. Web 3.0 is a term used to describe the future of the World Wide Web. Following the introduction of the phrase “Web 2.0” as a description of the recent evolution of the Web, many technologists, journalists, and industry leaders have used the term “Web 3.0” to hypothesize about a future wave of Internet innovation. 
8. Web 3.0 is defined as the creation of high-quality content and services produced by gifted individuals using Web 2.0 technology as an enabling platform. Web 3.0 refers to specific technologies that should be able to create the Semantic Web. 
9. Web 3.0 is used to describe the evolution of the use and interaction in the network through different paths. This includes the transformation of the network in a database, a move towards making content accessible by multiple non-browser applications, the thrust of artificial intelligence technologies, the semantic web, the Geospatial Web, or Web 3D .
10. Web 3.0 is a techno-social system of co-operation. Networked information technologies are used as medium that allows humans to produce something new together or to form cohesive social relations that are bound by feelings of togetherness and belonging. An example for the first are wikis and for the second social networking platforms. 
11. Is the creation of high-quality content and services produced by gifted individuals using Web 2.0 technology as an enabling platform. 
12. It learns from content collected on the Internet, analyzing its popularity, and reaching conclusions, without the need for people to refine search terms, being able to do it alone. It brings together the virtues of its 1.0 and 2.0 versions with machine intelligence additions where they unite with users in content production and action making the Internet infrastructure from supporting to leading content generation, and processes. 
13. It is the third generation of the web, and the focus is on delivering a web experience that is personalized by being responsive to the end-users needs and interests. Collects data based on the end-users web activity. 
14. Web 3.0 is the technological period that includes the latest internet technologies and applications that can produce data and share between them through to internet connections. It is also called “semantic web.” 
15. This network mode is censed to foster a new style of reception and production of information, knowledge and meaning. It is often nominated Semantic Web because its main aim is to construct social semantic sites and networks where their own underlying model of meaning and knowledge is manifest and described. 
16. Web 3.0 describes demand-orientated information-, communication-, and transaction processes within the Net Economy. Due to these processes, the consumer and the demand via individual registration, and specification systems represent the starting point for related E-Request, and E-Customization processes predominantly carried out by means of E-Desk (request) or modified E-Shop platforms. 
17. It represents the third phase in the evolution of the Web. It, among other things, supports a machine-facilitated understanding of information on the Web. Web 3.0 is a Semantic Web, a 3D Web, a pervasive Web, a large database presented as Web pages, or a combination of these. Web 3.0 is aimed at addressing the needs of a user in context by rolling up elements such as content, context, community, commerce, vertical or contextual search, and personalization. 
18. This network mode is censed to foster a new style of reception and production of information, knowledge and meaning. It is often nominated Semantic Web , in that its main purpose is to construct, deconstruct and reconstruct social semantic sites and networks, where their own underlying model of meaning and knowledge is manifest, described, narrated, and interpreted. 
19. The term used to describe the projected evolution of the Web as an extension of Web 2.0 which provides connective intelligence connecting data, concepts, applications and people through recognizing commonalities and relationships between initially independent data entities. 
20. Web 3.0 services will be content-oriented, semantic-based, context-sensitive services based on technologies supporting semantically enriched websites that might support portable IDs in order to use the Web as a database and an operating system. Examples are Eurekster, AskWiki, Twine, or Freebase. 
21. Term coined in 2006 by John Markoff of the New York Times to characterize a paradigm shift in the evolution of the Web from dispensary (Web 1.0) to interactive (Web 2.0) to reciprocal (Web 3.0) whereby instead of users reading the Web, as done with Web 1.0 and 2.0, the Web also reads the users. Examples include cookies, algorithms, and artificial intelligence that personalizes what users receive as they explore the Internet. 
22. The next generation of the Web which will include artificial intelligence and ubiquitous machine-connected semantic metadata.
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