
A Culture of Intimacy: a thesis for building enduring web3 communities
We need more intimacy on the internet, but not the kind of intimacy you might think. As operators in tech, we’re bombarded with oversimplified notions of growth fixated on exponential increases across quantitative metrics. Consider the ubiquity of crude mantras like number go up and up only. This strategy is misdirected within DAOs where the foundational function is community-building. While multi-thousand email waitlists may be beneficial for distribution, high-velocity member growth in earl...

Decentralized Media In web3 Is Not What You Think It Is
Let me start by saying what decentralized media is not: decentralized media is not decentralized content creation. steph 🪽🎀 @hhhuuunnn333yyy Decentralized media is not decentralized content creation 79 11:13 AM • Jul 5, 2022 Decentralized content creation is a skeuomorphic mental model that we ported from web2. Web2 social apps already provide the conditions for decentralized content creation. We can look to the meme and narrative network effects enabled by web2 social as a starting place f...

It’s All Connection, It Always Has Been
Like 29,999 (supposedly) other crypto mfers, I went to Denver last week. Things were feeling a bit stale for me online this first half of Q1. Crypto in Jan 2023 was a very different place than crypto in Jan 2022. It’s winter in all interpretations of the word. And even within exploring the chillier side of crypto with fellow operators, covering such boilerplate bear market themes like downsizing, burn rate, runway, focus — vibes were undeniably electric at ETH Denver. https://zora.co/collecti...
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A Culture of Intimacy: a thesis for building enduring web3 communities
We need more intimacy on the internet, but not the kind of intimacy you might think. As operators in tech, we’re bombarded with oversimplified notions of growth fixated on exponential increases across quantitative metrics. Consider the ubiquity of crude mantras like number go up and up only. This strategy is misdirected within DAOs where the foundational function is community-building. While multi-thousand email waitlists may be beneficial for distribution, high-velocity member growth in earl...

Decentralized Media In web3 Is Not What You Think It Is
Let me start by saying what decentralized media is not: decentralized media is not decentralized content creation. steph 🪽🎀 @hhhuuunnn333yyy Decentralized media is not decentralized content creation 79 11:13 AM • Jul 5, 2022 Decentralized content creation is a skeuomorphic mental model that we ported from web2. Web2 social apps already provide the conditions for decentralized content creation. We can look to the meme and narrative network effects enabled by web2 social as a starting place f...

It’s All Connection, It Always Has Been
Like 29,999 (supposedly) other crypto mfers, I went to Denver last week. Things were feeling a bit stale for me online this first half of Q1. Crypto in Jan 2023 was a very different place than crypto in Jan 2022. It’s winter in all interpretations of the word. And even within exploring the chillier side of crypto with fellow operators, covering such boilerplate bear market themes like downsizing, burn rate, runway, focus — vibes were undeniably electric at ETH Denver. https://zora.co/collecti...
Share Dialog
Share Dialog

If the promise of web3 is in fact truly revolutionary then let’s start with how we talk about it.
There’s a family of words floating around web3 that people are using to talk about the current state of the web’s third act. I’m talking about words like pioneer, frontier, settler, wilderness, explorer, and the like. We choose these words to convey the felt sensation of thrill, of simultaneously building as we’re discovering what it is we’re building. But these words are not only trite, they’re also the language of violence for many us who are actively building this space. Which is why web3 needs to reimagine its language.

It makes sense that we experience emotional resonance with these words - we are working backwards from centuries of imperialist colonialist storytelling after all. These words evoke cellular-level ancestral remembrances of adventure, exploration, high risk with high reward...but at who’s expense?
We already know how this story arcs. We’re witnessing it continue to unfold in real time, IRL.
I recently attended a DAO town hall where the analogy of walking through the jungle together was invoked throughout the call. I happen to have ancestral connections to an IRL place that colonizers violently oppressed in the 1500s. Upon arrival to our shores, they may have said similar things about my homeland as they navigated through our tropical paradise. (Think about it: these people were missionaries.)
People will talk about making web3 accessible and inclusive to people with “marginalized identities,” and then say the words “new frontier” in the same breath. Actually hold up, can we also stop using the word marginalized? We, the marginalized are actually the global majority, and I believe we are the web3 majority as well.
There is a rich opportunity to find new words to talk about what we’re building, and how we’re building it. Nature and organic systems have so much to teach us about this. Mycelium networks, fractals, ecosystems. There is language available to us that is non-extractive. We just have to tap into our fertile imaginations to find words that are precise, evocative, and that fully divest from the stale colonialist language of times past.
Let’s not repeat the mistakes of web2 and all that came before. We have the opportunity to shape the culture of web3 by shaping the language of web3. LFG 🕺🏻


If the promise of web3 is in fact truly revolutionary then let’s start with how we talk about it.
There’s a family of words floating around web3 that people are using to talk about the current state of the web’s third act. I’m talking about words like pioneer, frontier, settler, wilderness, explorer, and the like. We choose these words to convey the felt sensation of thrill, of simultaneously building as we’re discovering what it is we’re building. But these words are not only trite, they’re also the language of violence for many us who are actively building this space. Which is why web3 needs to reimagine its language.

It makes sense that we experience emotional resonance with these words - we are working backwards from centuries of imperialist colonialist storytelling after all. These words evoke cellular-level ancestral remembrances of adventure, exploration, high risk with high reward...but at who’s expense?
We already know how this story arcs. We’re witnessing it continue to unfold in real time, IRL.
I recently attended a DAO town hall where the analogy of walking through the jungle together was invoked throughout the call. I happen to have ancestral connections to an IRL place that colonizers violently oppressed in the 1500s. Upon arrival to our shores, they may have said similar things about my homeland as they navigated through our tropical paradise. (Think about it: these people were missionaries.)
People will talk about making web3 accessible and inclusive to people with “marginalized identities,” and then say the words “new frontier” in the same breath. Actually hold up, can we also stop using the word marginalized? We, the marginalized are actually the global majority, and I believe we are the web3 majority as well.
There is a rich opportunity to find new words to talk about what we’re building, and how we’re building it. Nature and organic systems have so much to teach us about this. Mycelium networks, fractals, ecosystems. There is language available to us that is non-extractive. We just have to tap into our fertile imaginations to find words that are precise, evocative, and that fully divest from the stale colonialist language of times past.
Let’s not repeat the mistakes of web2 and all that came before. We have the opportunity to shape the culture of web3 by shaping the language of web3. LFG 🕺🏻

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