Next winter, global tech leaders and policymakers will gather in Davos, Switzerland, for in-depth discussions around an ambitious vision—the Global Computer.



This forum focuses on a core question: How will artificial intelligence and emerging technologies redefine business operations, government governance, and everyday life? More importantly, what policy frameworks are needed to ensure these technologies are deployed responsibly?

The so-called Global Computer is essentially a decentralized network. It breaks the reliance on traditional IT infrastructure controlled centrally, with data and software distributed in tamper-proof ways, significantly reducing single points of failure and enhancing the network's resilience against malicious attacks.

This architecture changes the logic of application development and operations. As systems become more autonomous and reliable, the future form of the digital ecosystem unfolds—precisely the direction that Web3 and blockchain technologists have been exploring.

**Event Information**
📅 January 20, 2026
🏔️ Davos, Switzerland
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TopBuyerBottomSellervip
· 12h ago
Davos is holding another meeting, and this time they finally discussed decentralization. I just don't know if those old guys can really understand what Web3 is. We have to wait another year until 2026, and by then, regulatory attitudes will have to change again. Global computing sounds very advanced, but it's really just blockchain, just with a fancier name. This is the future. Decentralized networks are the right path. Traditional IT should retire. Tamper-proof and attack-resistant systems sound great, but in reality, are there really such perfect systems? Once again, a bunch of policymakers are setting limits on our technology. I bet five bucks that in the end, it will all be about regulation. But since the big shots are starting to discuss seriously, does that mean something big is about to happen?
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StakeHouseDirectorvip
· 12h ago
Decentralization sounds good, but I don't know how much can actually be implemented in reality. Davos is holding a meeting again, still the same topics, does it really make the crypto world look good? Global computing? Basically, it's just about making Web3 look presentable, politics are involved now. Tamper-proof and attack-resistant—sounds like a dream, is it real or not? Six years from now, will we still be around to see it? Haha. In the end, these forums are just everyone talking past each other. Any policy framework has to be carved out by the market itself through bloodshed.
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TokenStormvip
· 12h ago
Decentralized networks have strong resistance to attacks, and on-chain data indeed supports this, but the key is the policy framework. Can these people really be responsible in deployment? [Dog Head] It sounds good, but it's just another signal of people trying to cut leeks again. The technical aspect is indeed impressive, but the risk factor needs to be calculated clearly. I've already prepared my list of leverage for all-in. Is Davos going to discuss Web3? Is this a bottom signal? I've already saved on my miner fees. Anti-tampering, decentralization—sounds perfect, but when it comes to actual deployment, do these big shots really dare to delegate authority? Question mark.
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