PiedPiper

PiedPiper

Silicon Valley. Always Blue.

Palo AltoCiudad
2015Fundado
51-100Empleados
InternetSector

Enlaces sociales

Sobre la Empresa

The Internet We Deserve™Over the years, Pied Piper has changed many landscapes. Compression. Data. The Internet. Click below to look back at the evolution of Pied Piper. Revolutionizing one landscape at a time. The Internet CodeThe Internet’s pioneers were guided by four major principles while bringing the first devices online.* First, their Internet was decentralized, so that even users at the edges of the network could wield its full capability. * Second, it was neutral, meaning all nodes were on an equal playing field and their data couldn’t be discriminated against. * Third, nodes were interoperable, meaning there was nothing proprietary about how systems communicated. * Finally, the goal of the network was to give as much computing power to its users as possible.  As this code was put into practice it’s power created the most important tool in human history. The World Wide Web experienced unprecedented adoption rates — it took just 7 years for 25% of Americans to get online, compared to 26 years for television and 35 years for electricity. Where We Went WrongUnfortunately, over the years the modern web has neglected these ideals. Since the digital gold rush of the 90s, good tech has played second fiddle to commercial interests. Platforms, not people, power today’s Internet. A handful of companies’ services and networks influence the 3.8 billion people that use the Internet, leaving the end user with little to no autonomy and a slew of unwanted side effects — fake news, data collection, and constant surveillance to name a few.Enter PiperNetPiperNet is the world’s first fully decentralized web. On PiperNet, you’ll have lightning-fast speeds, massive amounts of free storage and compute, unparalleled privacy protection, and full ownership of your data.And best of all, it doesn’t need a centralized data center of complex servers to power it. It simply needs your phones and personal computers. Like Engelbart imagined, it started on a single PC. Join PiperNet, and the internet of tomorrow could start on yours.