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Box CEO Aaron Levie on where web3 doesn't make sense

 2 years ago
source link: https://finance.yahoo.com/news/box-ceo-aaron-levie-where-234604047.html
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Box CEO Aaron Levie on where web3 doesn't make sense

Lucas Matney and Anita Ramaswamy
Mon, June 20, 2022, 8:46 AM·3 min read
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It's been a rough week for the crypto community as top tokens have seen massive selloffs, pushing some in the space to double down while leaving others to take stock off how the industry got to this point and what widely accepted truths need to be re-evaluated as the crypto internet matures.

There haven't been many tech executives repeatedly criticizing the idea of what a "web3" crypto internet represents, but Box CEO Aaron Levie has certainly been more vocal than most. Earlier this week, we had the chance to catch up Levie on TechCrunch's crypto podcast Chain Reaction, pushing him to dial in on some of the promises surrounding web3 that he was most skeptical about.

You can listen to the full episode below:

"I think the philosophy behind much of web3 is compelling. I think it would be very hard to argue with the idea that more decentralized innovation wouldn't be a good thing," Levie told us. "I think the implementation that I've seen has a lot of challenges of actually getting to that philosophy being realized."

Levie isn't an executive of a crypto startup and he doesn't seem to be exploring a web3 pivot for Box, but he tells us that he tweets about web3 as much as he does because "by virtue of being a startup founder, you sort of have to understand where the world is going -- and then you have to make choices about if you believe the world is actually going in the direction that other people are saying or not."

Some have looked at the high-profile failures in recent weeks of highly-centralized players in the the decentralized world of blockchain as proof that more organizations should be run collectively. Levie doesn't seem to anticipate DAOs or collective ownership replacing the traditional structures of the startup world anytime soon, though.

"We rely on people in Cupertino to make decisions to build the iPhone and then we get to decide if we want to buy it or not buy it. That's our only decision that we get to make in the iPhone, we don't get to vote on anything, and if we voted on anything it would dramatically slow down the system and you just wouldn't be able to innovate very quickly," Levie says. "For collective movements, [DAOs] are super exciting, like no arguing that but to replace the organizational structure of a fast-moving startup or company -- I just don't think it's going to work."


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