The internet as
it was meant to be
The Original Internet Was
Peer-to-Peer, Not Platform-to-Platform
The internet wasn’t built for platforms,
it was built for people.
Built to Connect,
Not to Control
Protocols like TCP/IP and HTTP gave us global connectivity. But trust — the layer needed for transactions, coordination, and ownership — got outsourced to platforms, clouds, and middlemen.
It wasn’t designed to be secure.
That’s why platforms took over.
The Middlemen Moved In
As the internet scaled, trust broke,
and centralization took over.
Blockchains Reintroduced
Trust, But Only for Money
Bitcoin verified value, ethereum executed code,
and blockchains brought consensus to digital assets
but they didn’t solve trust
for the internet itself
They were:
- Monolithic
- Gas-priced
- Queue-limited
- Politically gated
Consensus worked, just not at the
internet’s speed, scale, or scope.
A Machine for Coordination, at
Internet Scale
RealityNet is trust reimagined for the digital world,
it doesn’t patch the internet – It upgrades it.
- Synchronizes state across chains and systems
- Runs apps across a mesh of devices, not inside a chain
- Turns any app into a trustless coordination layer
- Runs apps across a mesh of devices, not inside a chain
- Synchronizes state across chains and systems
- Runs apps across a mesh of devices, not inside a chain
- Turns any app into a trustless coordination layer
- Runs apps across a mesh of devices, not inside a chain