Threats, complexities, and a plethora of additional data
Many challenges confront business leaders in the areas of cybersecurity, trust, brand reputation, and digital rights management. Web3 and the metaverse may necessitate new network and partner ecosystem implementations. For businesses that are already concerned about these disruptions, this can increase the surface area of vulnerability and data risk. Malevolent actors may find new and more advanced ways to attack organisations as complexity increases.
Layered blockchains and bridges are vulnerable. Crypto custody can be compromised, the validity of NFT transactions jeopardised, and a user’s true identity can be extracted from transactional data. Immersion and embodied digital interactions may generate a large amount of data about users, exposing new threats and security concerns.
Organizations may need to advance physical and digital security policies, processes, and technologies while also evolving identity management, threat detection, consent and content management, data protection, and compliance. Nonetheless, there are numerous use cases and lessons to be learned, as well as a wide range of experiments to investigate that can assist in addressing the challenges.
Increasing capacity for the future
With all of the hype and criticism surrounding Web3 and the metaverse, it can be difficult to navigate so much change and discontinuity. Web3’s foundations are already in place, and it will continue to seek value and eliminate problems. Many metaverse capabilities and behaviours exist, inspiring the largest platform and digital lifestyle providers to invest massive sums in its success.
Leaders should examine their businesses and customers to identify areas where Web3 protocols can provide unique and compelling experiences, improve efficiency, and address regulatory pressures.
Through metaverse experiences, some may be able to productize virtual goods, extend their brands, or provide enterprise services. Some organisations may need to expand their networks, cloud, compute, and storage capacity, as well as add the talent required to execute on these next-generation capabilities. If metaverse interactions generate data at an exponential rate, businesses may require new solutions to operate on that data continuously and effectively, while also adhering to evolving regulatory and compliance regimes. Furthermore, businesses could use cryptocurrency and smart contracts to manage finances much more quickly, essentially automating capital and making money programmable.
Businesses may also be burdened by the complexity of so much data and the difficulty in converting it into value. As frightening as it may appear, many leading businesses could be liberated by abandoning old approaches and collaborating with partner ecosystems to build data management in a more holistic and agile manner.
To do so, business leaders will most likely need to focus more on standardisation and interoperability, which will support entire markets—and communities—beyond the existing market leaders.
Leaders should, however, carefully consider the rate of adoption and growth, particularly for immersive experiences. Some things will move quickly, while others will take their time. Business leaders should investigate how their capabilities and mission enable them to build in the short term, plan for the medium term, and prepare for the long term. Experimenting with Web3 and metaverse solutions to today’s problems can help to lay the groundwork for new business models.
There is a lot more to learn. What changes will regulation bring, and how will use cases affect networks, semiconductors, software, and consumer devices? How do you think media and entertainment will evolve? What role does artificial intelligence play in enhancing these capabilities, and what does the future of risk and cybersecurity hold?.
Finally, this major shift responds to the demands of people, business, and technology to lay the groundwork for the next phase of progress.