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Just caught wind of something interesting brewing in the enterprise Web3 space. ATT Global just partnered with ENI to basically turn real-world advertising into a blockchain-native asset. And honestly, this feels like one of those quiet moves that could reshape how businesses think about attention and engagement.
So here's the core idea: what if human attention from physical ads—billboards, retail displays, that kind of thing—could be tracked, measured, and monetized on-chain? That's what ATT Global is building. They're combining Real-World Assets (RWA) with Decentralized Physical Infrastructure Networks (DePIN) to bridge offline advertising with Web3 ecosystems. ENI, an enterprise-grade Layer 1 blockchain, is providing the infrastructure to make it work at scale.
What caught my attention is how practical this is. Instead of advertising being this one-way medium where brands just broadcast and hope people care, you could have users actually earn or interact with rewards when they engage with physical ads. A user sees a billboard, scans it, and boom—on-chain event triggered. Rewards, identity verification, whatever. It's the kind of thing that actually gives Web3 a real use case beyond speculation.
ENI's architecture is modular, which matters for enterprise adoption. They've built it so companies can spin up custom AppChains under shared governance without getting tangled up in regulatory complexity. That's the kind of infrastructure Web3 needs if it's going to move beyond niche communities into actual business operations.
The bigger picture here is that traditional industries are finally getting serious about blockchain. Not just for hype, but to improve transparency, efficiency, and create new revenue streams. RWA and DePIN are becoming more than buzzwords—they're actual infrastructure connecting physical systems to decentralized platforms.
What's compelling is how this bridges Web2 and Web3. Most advertising is still completely siloed from decentralized systems. This partnership is basically saying: what if we connected those worlds? Users could access Web3 experiences through physical touchpoints. Businesses get verifiable data and transparency. It's a step toward actually combining physical and digital economies instead of keeping them separate.
This is the kind of enterprise Web3 adoption that actually matters—not just another DeFi protocol, but infrastructure that solves real business problems. Worth keeping an eye on as the space evolves.