The following is a guest post from Anurag Arjun, co-founder of available.
Modern technical platforms pass because they break complex operations in specialized components. During much inquired events such as Black Friday, Amazon can scale up specific services under pressure, while others retain normal operations.
This architecture has enabled a full ecosystem of companies to build the top of AWS, each focused on its core competence, while using a fight tested infrastructure that gives users a seamless experience. In 2025 it is time for Web3 to think such as Amazon and other Web2 Giants, because a web3 in MicroServices style is the ideal basis for the future of business.
Platformon dependence
Even Amazon acknowledges that the future is not about platform locking-aldhans not within a store-de real value of offering infrastructure that drives business growth everywhere: Chinese traders Anyone who has built their foundation on Amazon are now growing faster on platforms such as Walmart and Tiktok Shop, but instead of combating this shift, Amazon adjusts by opening their logistics activities for this multi-platform sellers and competing with infrastructure quality rather than Exclusivity.
This reflects how Web3 should evolve: instead of trying to catch users and companies in closed ecosystems, protocols should think more about uniting specialized infrastructure that adds value, regardless of where the actual transactions occur.
Just as Amazon can take advantage of the success of sellers on other platforms by offering crucial backend infrastructure, Web3 protocols can dive through specialized services – such as verifiable ownership or programmable assets – that create value throughout the digital economy. The winners will not be the ones who build walled gardens, but those who offer the essential infrastructure that makes things better everywhere.
The future of Web3 is not about building isolated chains; It is about making services that communicate seamlessly behind the scenes. Look to understand this evolution how microservices work: when you have interaction with a web app, you don’t really interact with one monolithic system. Instead, specialized microservices treat each part of the experience of experience, in browser chat, inventory, payments, shipping-asynchronous communication with such high speeds that users regard it as a single, flexible experience.
This is a web3 with which Web2 cannot compete: seamless user experience, plus verifiable ownership, permissionless participation and programmable value transfer.
It is not the web3 of today, but it will be soon. As rolls and application -specific chains distribute, users still have to navigate in an increasingly complex landscape of bridges, solutions from third parties and various security admissions. Each new chain adds a different layer of complexity, forcing users to understand bridging mechanics and manage assets on multiple networks. This fragmentation is not only uncomfortable – it will be a fundamental barrier for regular acceptance.
Moreover, this problem will dramatically aggravate. The ecosystem goes to a world with hundreds or thousands of rollups, often optimized for specific applications. Without a uniting framework that enables these chains to seamlessly communicate, the user experience is increasingly broken and inaccessible to regular users.
Break down
The technical basis for Amazon-like experiences in Web3 requires three components: reliable data availability, evidence of evidence and a coordination layer. Availability of data ensures that transaction information is published correctly. Evidence of evidence, through validity tests or fraud tickets, guarantees the correct implementation. The coordination layer aggregate this evidence while retaining the chain severeinity.
It is crucial that such a system must maintain the minimization of trust. In contrast to the trusted API calls from Amazon, blockchain interactions require cryptographic guarantees that are verifiable through light customers on mobile devices. Users must be able to verify both data availability and implementation tickets without trusting intermediaries.
The challenge lies in aggregating different types of evidence. Every rollup ecosystem – from polygon to starware – implements different evidence systems. Make adapters to make these systems compatible while maintaining their security guarantees represents the core technical challenge for Web3 infrastructure.
Success requires a permissionless verification hub that can collect evidence, while chains can maintain independence. Necklaces must freely choose which evidence they accept instead of conforming to forced standards. This saves the innovation that makes modular blockchain architecture powerful and at the same time makes seamless user experiences possible. The missing piece coordinates these components in a united but sovereign system.
Just as Amazon’s MicroServices architecture made e-commerce possible to scale, asynchronous chain communication Web3 will design in the best place for companies of the future to build and work.
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