The economics of the existing internet are straightforward once you understand them. You create content. You build connections. You generate behavioral data through every click, search, and purchase. Platforms harvest that activity, package it, and sell it to advertisers. You receive nothing. The platforms receive everything. This is not a bug. It is the business model.
The revenue sharing section of awaken.nw — accessible in Spanish at neuraweb.io/awaken.nw/es/ — proposes a different arrangement, and backs it up with a specific table of numbers.
On NeuraWeb, content creators keep between 70 and 95 percent of the revenue their content generates. Commerce participants keep the majority of their transaction value. Contributors to the platform's data and community earn Aether points that translate to real platform value. The numbers vary by dApp and contribution type — but the direction is consistent and structurally opposite to every major existing platform: value flows to users, not away from them.
The Spanish edition of the revenue table is not incidental. Spanish is the second most spoken language on earth by native speakers. Latin America represents one of the fastest-growing internet populations in the world — and one that has experienced the extractive economics of Silicon Valley platforms without receiving any of the benefits that accrue to advertisers, investors, and executives in California. Presenting the revenue sharing model in Spanish is a direct acknowledgment that this audience has particular reason to care about a platform that pays rather than harvests.
NeuraWeb founder S. Vincent Anthony (vincent.nw) has described the revenue model as the logical consequence of data ownership. If the data is yours, the value derived from it is yours. The platform's job is to make that value real — not to intercept it.
See the full revenue model in Spanish at neuraweb.io/awaken.nw/es/.
This is the ninth in a twelve-part NeuraNews Network series on awaken.nw and the vision behind NeuraWeb.