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What Are DePINs? A Guide To The Decentralized Physical Infrastructure Networks Transforming Industries
What Are DePINs? A Guide To The Decentralized Physical Infrastructure Networks Transforming Industries

Forbes

time7 hours ago

  • Business
  • Forbes

What Are DePINs? A Guide To The Decentralized Physical Infrastructure Networks Transforming Industries

Decentralized Physical Infrastructure Networks, known as DePINs, are reshaping how we interact with the physical world by merging with blockchain technology. DePINs offer a permissionless way for individuals to contribute real-world resources like bandwidth, energy or storage and earn tokens in return. This innovation creates shared infrastructure that is transparent, secure and operated by the crowd, not corporations. This article will explore how DePINs work, why they matter and which industries they are transforming. From decentralized WiFi to community-powered energy grids, DePINs are creating new incentives for people to participate in building the world's next generation of infrastructure. DePINs allow real-world services to be owned and operated by individual users instead of large corporations. Using token rewards, DePINs allow users to contribute physical resources and get paid for them. This approach can make infrastructure more accessible, affordable and suited to local needs. Traditional infrastructure is managed by a few centralized players. DePINs flip that model using open networks where anyone can run a device. The network keeps track of everything on a public blockchain, promoting transparency and making fraudulent activity difficult. Smart contracts automate transactions, so manual approval is not required to process each action. DePINs invite competition and innovation and give smaller players a chance to participate in infrastructure projects without needing massive upfront funding. DePINs work by using blockchain technology to record transactions, verify participation and manage the exchange of services. Participants install physical hardware such as routers, sensors or storage devices and share their unused capacity with the network. In return, they receive token rewards. This system allows infrastructure to be owned and operated by a broad group of users rather than a single central provider. Smart contracts help automate the network's operation. They follow predefined rules to manage service delivery and distribute rewards without manual intervention. Token incentives are used to compensate contributors and access services within the network. This creates a system where participation and usage are directly linked, helping the network sustain itself over time. This structure is sometimes described as a flywheel. The process begins when users are rewarded for contributing resources. As more people participate, the network becomes more capable and the quality of services improves. Better performance attracts additional users and potential investors. As the network grows, its value and utility increase, leading to more participation and continued expansion. DePINs are being used in a growing number of real world applications that rely on shared infrastructure. These include decentralized wireless networks that expand internet access, decentralized storage solutions that offer alternatives to traditional cloud providers and community-powered energy systems such as EV charging stations and smart energy grids. Each use case highlights how DePINs can lower costs, increase access and reduce reliance on centralized systems. Decentralized wireless networks use a peer-to-peer model to provide internet and device connectivity without relying on large telecom providers. Individuals operate physical infrastructure like routers, antennas or Internet-of-Things (IoT) devices, helping expand coverage and reduce costs, especially in underserved areas. Smartphones and sensors connect through nearby nodes, enabling more resilient and efficient communication. Projects like Helium and Pollen Mobile showcase this approach. Helium rewards users for running low-power hotspots that support IoT connectivity, while Pollen focuses on decentralized 5G networks powered by community-hosted radios. Both rely on community participation to grow infrastructure and support applications in smart cities, rural areas and logistics. Decentralized storage networks spread data across many nodes rather than relying on centralized data centers. This reduces the need for energy-intensive facilities and cuts infrastructure costs. These networks offer greater efficiency and flexibility by using underutilized storage on individual devices or small servers. They can also be deployed near renewable energy sources, making it easier to power them with solar, wind or hydro. Platforms like Filecoin and Arweave reward users for sharing storage space while securing and distributing data through blockchain protocols. Decentralized energy networks let individuals and businesses produce, store and share power without relying on major utilities. Microgrids powered by solar panels can store excess energy in local batteries and release it during peak demand or outages. Smart grids manage this in real time, improving reliability. DePIN-based EV charging networks allow people to host chargers and earn tokens from drivers. This speeds up infrastructure growth and supports cleaner, more resilient energy systems. Shifting control from central providers to communities makes infrastructure more affordable, resilient and inclusive. This model lowers costs, opens doors for small-scale participants and keeps systems running during disruptions. It also encourages wider involvement in building and maintaining essential services like internet access, energy and storage. By removing intermediaries, DePINs cut infrastructure costs and enable direct participation. People in underserved areas can share or access resources, lowering barriers and expanding access to essential services like internet, energy and storage. Without centralized overhead, services are often more affordable and better suited to local needs. They also boost efficiency by using underutilized resources instead of building new systems, reducing waste, and supporting a more sustainable model. Greater resilience is achieved by distributing infrastructure across many independent nodes, which reduces the risk of a single point of failure. Unlike centralized systems that can be disrupted by outages, cyberattacks or physical damage to a central hub, decentralized networks can continue operating even if some nodes go offline. This built-in redundancy ensures more consistent service. The distributed nature of DePINs also enhances security and privacy, making them less vulnerable to censorship, surveillance or control by any single entity. Infrastructure is becoming more open and participatory through decentralized networks that let individuals and communities build and operate essential services. Instead of relying on a few centralized providers, these networks use blockchain and tokens to incentivize anyone to contribute. This model promotes transparency, reduces entry barriers and supports broader access to services like the internet, data storage and EV charging. As the sector grows, DePINs are helping prevent monopolies by enabling multiple stakeholders to share ownership and development. This shift toward shared infrastructure encourages competition, lowers prices and fosters innovation across industries. Despite their potential, DePINs face hurdles that could slow growth. Scaling across many nodes can strain performance and reliability. Regulatory uncertainty adds compliance risks as laws around digital assets evolve. Adoption may also lag, since these systems often require technical know-how and a shift from familiar centralized models. Relying on distributed funding and operations makes scaling difficult. Token incentives and crowdfunding are inclusive but often inconsistent and harder to coordinate than traditional methods, which can limit growth and deter institutional investment. Without central oversight, upkeep and troubleshooting depend on individuals who may not act quickly, risking delays and reduced network reliability. Regulatory uncertainty remains a significant obstacle for projects building decentralized infrastructure. Operating at the intersection of blockchain, hardware and real-world services, these networks face unique challenges that most crypto sectors avoid. Unlike purely digital applications, they involve physically deploying assets like wireless hotspots, storage nodes and energy systems. Yet regulators have provided little clarity on token classification, governance, data privacy or global compliance. This lack of guidance leaves builders exposed to enforcement and legal ambiguity. Adding to the difficulty is the political influence of legacy industries. Telecoms, cloud providers and utilities often fund PACs and lobbying efforts that can shape regulation to preserve their dominance. This creates an uneven playing field. Without clear, balanced rules, innovation risks being stifled before it can scale. A wide range of use cases, from wireless and storage to community-run services, makes presenting a clear, relatable message challenging. The technical nature of many projects further slows product-market fit and mainstream traction. Without strong messaging and user-friendly design, adoption may lag. To scale, the sector must simplify its value proposition and show how these networks improve real-world services in practical, accessible ways. Industries with high capital needs and little competition are already seeing DePIN adoption. Helium built a decentralized network of IoT and mobile hotspots, partnering with T-Mobile to offer lower-cost service. Hivemapper and Geodnet collect geospatial data through user-operated devices, feeding navigation and AI systems. These community-driven networks replace expensive, centralized models with cheaper, more scalable alternatives. In AI infrastructure, projects like Grass let users monetize bandwidth for data scraping, while Akash enables decentralized GPU leasing. Bittensor, part of decentralized AI, supports compute-focused subnets. Together, these efforts shift control over data and compute away from tech giants and toward individuals. The future of these networks is poised to extend well beyond current applications, potentially reshaping industries like healthcare, transportation, environmental monitoring, and public safety. As AI and machine learning evolve, DePINs can supply the decentralized compute, real-world data, and infrastructure needed to train and launch advanced models. Their integration into the broader Web3 ecosystem also enables greater user ownership, data privacy, and interoperability across decentralized applications. By removing traditional gatekeepers and distributing control, DePINs could serve as the backbone for a more open, efficient, and resilient digital-physical economy bridging the gap between Web3 innovation and real-world utility. Bottom Line Control is shifting from centralized providers to individuals and communities. By using blockchain and smart contracts, these networks improve transparency, lower costs and boost resilience across sectors like the internet, storage and energy. Though still early, DePINs are already making an impact in telecom and AI, and are positioned to transform many more industries in the years ahead. What Are DePINs? DePINs are decentralized networks that use blockchain to let individuals share real-world resources like the internet, energy or storage in exchange for token rewards. What Makes DePIN Different From Other Decentralized Systems? DePINs connect blockchain to real-world infrastructure by using physical devices like routers, sensors and GPUs. Unlike purely digital systems, it bridges the gap between the digital and physical worlds. Are DePINs Safe And Secure? Yes, DePINs use encryption, blockchain verification and decentralized design to enhance security and reduce single points of failure. Can DePIN Replace Traditional Infrastructure? DePIN has the potential to complement or replace parts of traditional infrastructure by offering lower costs, greater resilience and broader access.

Opponents of French Players at the French Open Deal with Insults and Whistling and, Yes, Even Gum
Opponents of French Players at the French Open Deal with Insults and Whistling and, Yes, Even Gum

Asharq Al-Awsat

time4 days ago

  • General
  • Asharq Al-Awsat

Opponents of French Players at the French Open Deal with Insults and Whistling and, Yes, Even Gum

In all sports, there are advantages to being at home. At the French Open tennis tournament, being a visitor playing against a French player can feel as though the whole world is against you. The crowds don't just cheer. They boo, they whistle, they make noise between serves, they hurl insults and, at least once, even gum, at the locals' opponents. That sort of behavior is why the tournament organizers banned alcohol from the stands last year, a policy still in place. Some of the non-French athletes who deal with that sort of negativity in Paris, such as 19-year-old Jakub Mensík of the Czech Republic, who eliminated Alexandre Müller in front of a rowdy crowd at Court 14 on Tuesday, compare the high-intensity atmosphere to that of a soccer game. Others choose stronger terms. "Disgusting. Worst experience of my life," was what Nicolás Jarry of Chile said this week when asked to think back to last year's rowdy loss at Court Simonne-Mathieu to France's Corentin Moutet, whose coach had implored the spectators to make life "hell" for Jarry after the two had a contentious meeting in Santiago earlier in the season. Jarry blamed that on Moutet, saying that everything was calmer during his loss Monday to another Frenchman, Arthur Fils, whom the Chilean called a "good guy" and a "gentleman." "It's a battle out there, you know. Sometimes, it's not just a battle with the player," said Novak Djokovic, who is scheduled to face the irrepressible Moutet in the second round Thursday. Expect an antagonistic atmosphere. Djokovic sure does. "They're going to have the crowd on their side. It's nothing strange about it. It's expected," the 24-time Grand Slam champion said. "But it is true that here in France and in Paris, comparing to other Slams, the people are louder and more passionate and just give more support, louder support, more energy to their player, which for some (opponents) can be annoying. It's not the kind of ideal environment you want to be playing in, but you have to be ready for it." So much for the supposed silence usually found in a tennis arena. It all raises questions about where the line between support and incivility lies. "We've stepped up security," tournament director Amélie Mauresmo, a former No. 1 player, said before this year's event, "and given chair umpires greater power to intervene and report unacceptable behavior in the stands." For Mensík on Tuesday, the jeers began every time he hit the ball during the warmup ahead of his 7-5, 6-7 (5), 7-5, 6-3 win over France's Müller. More arrived once play began, accompanying each of his 20 aces or just when he simply walked to check a ball mark, a routine part of clay-court tennis. After taking the third set, Mensík gave the boo birds a little bit back, waving his right index finger as if it were a baton conducting an orchestra, a move he learned from Djokovic. "Sometimes," Mensík said of the crowd, "it is too far." Still, there are those who shrug it all off. "That's part of tennis, especially here. My opponent had her fans here; I have mine in Belgium. It's normal," said Elise Mertens, the 24th-seeded Belgian who was a semifinalist at the 2018 Australian Open and lost Tuesday to Lois Boisson of France at Court 14. "Fans were loud but not insulting. I didn't feel any particular hostility." There are two sides to the loud backing French players receive. It "makes you feel like you could reach for the stars," said the highest-ranked French woman, Varvara Gracheva, who acknowledged that support also can become a burden. She lost in the first round on Tuesday. It's been a quarter of a century since a woman representing the host nation won the singles title at the French Open (Mary Pierce in 2000) and even longer since a man did (Yannick Noah in 1983). "As French players, we're under pressure all the time when we play here" said Moutet, currently ranked No. 73. "When you lose, you 'suck.' When you win, you're 'King of the World.' So you have to try to ignore the pressure." Nathan Fhima, an 18-year-old high school student from Paris, figured his compatriots needed his voice. So, there he was this week at Roland-Garros, waving a blue-white-and-red French flag and screaming himself hoarse while skipping class to watch qualifying and first-round matches. "We have to push them, because not much will happen otherwise," he said after watching France's Diane Parry lose Monday. "Maybe that noise will lift a homegrown champion to victory again. We have to believe."

Opponents of home players at French Open deal with insults, whistling and even gum
Opponents of home players at French Open deal with insults, whistling and even gum

The Independent

time4 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • The Independent

Opponents of home players at French Open deal with insults, whistling and even gum

French players at the French Open can enjoy a real home advantage with the Roland Garros crowd among the most hostile in tennis. The Paris crowd go beyond cheers for their favourites, with boos, whistles and even insults hurled at the other players. There was at least once an instance with gum was thrown at the locals' opponents. A trend of unwanted behaviour led to the tournament organizers banning alcohol from the stands last year, with the policy still in place. Some of the non-French athletes who deal with that sort of negativity in Paris, such as 19-year-old Jakub Mensík of the Czech Republic, who eliminated Alexandre Müller in front of a rowdy crowd at Court 14 on Tuesday, compare the high-intensity atmosphere to that of a soccer game. Others choose stronger terms. One player says French Open fans can be 'disgusting'. 'Disgusting. Worst experience of my life,' was what Nicolás Jarry of Chile said this week when asked to think back to last year's rowdy loss at Court Simonne-Mathieu to France's Corentin Moutet, whose coach had implored the spectators to make life 'hell' for Jarry after the two had a contentious meeting in Santiago earlier in the season. Jarry blamed that on Moutet, saying that everything was calmer during his loss Monday to another Frenchman, Arthur Fils, whom the Chilean called a 'good guy' and a 'gentleman.' 'It's a battle out there, you know. Sometimes, it's not just a battle with the player,' said Novak Djokovic, who is scheduled to face the irrepressible Moutet in the second round Thursday. Expect an antagonistic atmosphere. Djokovic sure does. 'They're going to have the crowd on their side. It's nothing strange about it. It's expected,' the 24-time Grand Slam champion said. 'But it is true that here in France and in Paris, comparing to other Slams, the people are louder and more passionate and just give more support, louder support, more energy to their player, which for some (opponents) can be annoying. It's not the kind of ideal environment you want to be playing in, but you have to be ready for it.' So much for the supposed silence usually found in a tennis arena. It all raises questions about where the line between support and incivility lies. 'We've stepped up security," tournament director Amélie Mauresmo, a former No. 1 player, said before this year's event, "and given chair umpires greater power to intervene and report unacceptable behavior in the stands.' For Mensík on Tuesday, the jeers began every time he hit the ball during the warmup ahead of his 7-5, 6-7 (5), 7-5, 6-3 win over France's Müller. More arrived once play began, accompanying each of his 20 aces or just when he simply walked to check a ball mark — a routine part of clay-court tennis. After taking the third set, Mensík gave the boo birds a little bit back, waving his right index finger as if it were a baton conducting an orchestra, a move he learned from Djokovic. 'Sometimes,' Mensík said of the crowd, 'it is too far.' Still, there are those who shrug it all off. 'That's part of tennis, especially here. My opponent had her fans here; I have mine in Belgium. It's normal," said Elise Mertens, the 24th-seeded Belgian who was a semifinalist at the 2018 Australian Open and lost Tuesday to Lois Boisson of France at Court 14. 'Fans were loud but not insulting. I didn't feel any particular hostility.' There are two sides to the loud backing French players receive. It 'makes you feel like you could reach for the stars,' said the highest-ranked French woman, Varvara Gracheva, who acknowledged that support also can become a burden. She lost in the first round Tuesday. It's been a quarter of a century since a woman representing the host nation won the singles title at the French Open ( Mary Pierce in 2000) and even longer since a man did ( Yannick Noah in 1983). 'As French players, we're under pressure all the time when we play here' said Moutet, currently ranked No. 73. 'When you lose, you 'suck.' When you win, you're 'King of the World.' So you have to try to ignore the pressure.' Nathan Fhima, an 18-year-old high school student from Paris, figured his compatriots needed his voice. So there he was this week at Roland-Garros, waving a blue-white-and-red French flag and screaming himself hoarse while skipping class to watch qualifying and first-round matches. 'We have to push them, because not much will happen otherwise,' he said after watching France's Diane Parry lose Monday. 'Maybe that noise will lift a homegrown champion to victory again. We have to believe.'

What happened during the Liverpool parade crash
What happened during the Liverpool parade crash

BreakingNews.ie

time4 days ago

  • General
  • BreakingNews.ie

What happened during the Liverpool parade crash

A driver has been arrested after allegedly ploughing into a crowd at Liverpool's victory parade. More than 50 people, including children, were treated in different hospitals and 11 people remained there in a stable condition. Advertisement Here, the PA news agency looks at how the events unfolded. (PA Graphics/PA) – End of the parade As the parade drew to a close on Monday evening, thousands of fans began making their way home. The area was closed off, with no vehicles allowed in. As reports emerged of someone suffering a heart attack in the crowd, a road block was temporarily lifted to let an ambulance crew in. Police think the Ford Galaxy was able to slip through behind it. – Dale Street Footage of the incident circulating online appears to show the people carrier on Dale Street, just off the parade route. Surrounded by fans, the car suddenly reverses, hitting a person. The crowd reacts angrily, kicking and punching the vehicle. It reverses again, striking another bystander. Moments later, the car speeds forward, with fans chasing after it. More than 50 people were injured in the incident (Owen Humphreys/PA) From another angle, footage shows people trying to get to the driver. One person manages to open the driver's door, and an object is thrown, smashing the rear window. The driver quickly slams the door shut, then accelerates, veering into pedestrians on both sides of the congested street. Advertisement – Water Street Footage taken as the car made its way down Dale Street and onto the connecting Water Street shows the vehicle ploughing into a crowd of people having gone around an ambulance. As the car finally comes to a stop, fans surge towards it and desperately try to get to the driver. A man is helped from the scene by firefighters (Owen Humphreys/PA) Videos show the aftermath of the incident, with injured people, a paramedic's bicycle and scattered debris littering the street. – Arrest Officers quickly surround the car and detain the driver. A large number of officers could then be seen guarding the vehicle moments after the collision and pushing back fans. The 53-year-old driver has been arrested on suspicion of attempted murder, dangerous driving and drug driving. Advertisement The man, from the West Derby area of Liverpool, remains in custody where he is being interviewed.

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