This is somewhat true but most like most things, there needs to be people to build the damn thing. The tools are there, the potential is there, but there is nobody building it and making money off it. Yes, Hive could be a great information backup center for plain text files for Enterprise systems that want to save and hold their data remotely. It could also be a great cyber security tool as it can also be a last resource against crypto ransom attacks, or even like you said, a data later for some large or short language models.
But for that to work, we need a finding engine that can take care of the companies that will go forward into the Enterprise world and sell the products.
20 years ago, Enterprise didn't trust cloud, so if was a hard sell until Google and Amazon took over. 10 years ago, Enterprise didn't trust public Blockchains, or Blockchains all together until JP Morgan and IBM pushed hyperledger, Quorum and other private Blockchains. I'm not sure if Enterprise have realized the value of using a public Blockchain like Ethereum or Solana, but I'm not hearing a bull run on public Blockchain like Hive building solutions for the Enterprise market.
I would love to see if you have seen any company doing that and succeeding even if it's not Hive. Maybe liquid or Hedera? I know EOS did gain a foot in the IDB (international Development bank) 1 for cross-border payments between tokenized US dollars and Dominican Pesos.
Any Proof Of concept for Blockchain for current AI startups relying on Blockchain as a storage rather than tokenized data would be great.
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What you state is true for most of Web 3.0. A lot of potential but not a great deal of building. Applications are scarce outside of the financial arena although a case could be made things are lacking greatly.
As for enterprise, there is a major issue: privacy. A lot of enterprise data simply is not for public eyeballs. But the analogy holds strong, cloud was resisted for years by enterprise...until it wasnt.