Uma implementação completa de um protocolo P2P escrito integralmente em JavaScript
Um protocolo P2P escrito em JavaScript
js-ipfs estabelece o caminho para a implementação do protocolo IPFS no Browser. Programado completamente em JavaScript, pode ser usado no Browser, num Service Worker, numa Web Extension e em Node.js, abrindo as portas para um mundo de possibilidades.
js-ipfs pode ser usado no Browser, num Service Worker, numa Web Extension e em Node.js, abrindo as portas para um mundo de possibilidades.
Identity
Social networks and app stores not only harvest our players' data but also trap them in closed ecosystems. Give our players back control of their accounts by using decentralized cryptographic signing tools such as Web3Modal.
Free our Data
The Internet has made our data the new oil. Yet, it's mainly the platforms that benefit from this resource, instead of the developers and players who actually generate the data. We can explore new ways to store and value data by using advanced decentralized protocols such as IPFS.
Our items, our rules
In today's virtual economies, a player's virtual items and achievements are not truly theirs to spend and share. This isn't a technological limitation -- it's a deliberate design choice. With Web 3.0, we can now create futuristic economies, where players earn virtual items that can be used and traded regardless of the game universe. We can use services to build these items similar to Gitcoin's Kudos
OPGames Kudos
Developers can create valuable and tradable badges to honor their core supporters.
Ether Gun
We can build our in-game items to be usable across game universes.
Take Back The Web Winner
We can reward players currencies and trophies to highlight their achievements even more.
Ethdenver Bufficorn
Or simply create items to be collected and shared on virtual showcases.
Stand on the shoulder of giants
Game developers have been accustomed to monolithic game engines like Unity and Unreal, but these platforms are also captive ecosystems themselves. By building open-source Javascript browser-based games, game developers and players have the whole gamut of groundbreaking new web technologies to experiment with.
Build on co-op principles
Co-op is not only a way to play games together, it's also a paradigm shift. For the past decade, developers have been accustomed to building according to the platforms' whims: needing to scale to millions of users and rely on ad or in-app revenue. Platform cooperativism entreats us to question the economics of a platform -- is it sustainable to scale infinitely? Or is there a way to design a more sustainable ecosystem, where we treat our players as owners and give them the power of governance?
A reference with concrete examples of how we can build alternative ecosystems to platform monopolies.
A set of tools and research on how to build player-owned governance on virtual worlds.