
“Staked media” may reshape trust online by tying opinions and forecasts to onchain commitments.
By 2026, the signal is increasingly clear: crypto’s next phase is not about launching new tokens but about quietly wiring itself into systems that already matter. Instead, blockchains are quietly moving into new territory, reshaping how markets price uncertainty, how systems verify computation, and how credibility is earned online. Across finance, infrastructure, and media, crypto is appearing less as a product and more as plumbing.
Prediction markets are being used to surface real-time signals, zero-knowledge tools are hardening cloud and data workflows, and media experiments are tying credibility to on-chain stakes. Together, these developments suggest crypto is embedding itself into how information, incentives, and trust are coordinated in the real world.
Analysts from a16z expect prediction markets to scale far beyond elections and headline events, with thousands of niche, overlapping contracts that surface real-time probabilities across politics, economics, and culture. As these markets multiply, the challenge shifts from access to resolution, deciding what actually counts as “truth” when outcomes are disputed.
The firm points to tools such as decentralized governance and AI-powered oracles to handle edge cases. Rather than replacing polls, prediction markets may feed on them, using crypto to prove participants are human and AI to extract cleaner signals from noisy data. Recent moves by firms like Coinbase, building regulated clearing for event markets, suggest that this infrastructure phase is already underway.
Another pillar of the thesis is zero-knowledge technology escaping its blockchain-only cage. a16z researchers argue that zkVMs are nearing a performance threshold where generating cryptographic proofs becomes cheap enough for everyday computing.
If that happens, cloud workloads could come with mathematical guarantees of correctness, no blind trust in providers required. The result would be verifiable cloud computing, where businesses can prove code ran as promised without re-running it themselves. In this view, crypto becomes the plumbing for trust across the internet, not just for ledgers and tokens.
The global cloud computing market size is estimated to grow from $766 billion in 2025 to $3.5 trillion by 2035, at a CAGR of 14.623% during the forecast period to 2035.
That push toward verifiable computation is also showing up at the state level. The United Kingdom has committed £500 million to quantum computing over four years, underscoring how seriously governments now view cryptographic infrastructure. The move highlights a broader race to prove computation and security at scale, exactly the problem zero-knowledge systems are trying to solve before quantum advances force the issue.
Perhaps the most provocative idea is what a16z calls “staked media.” As AI-generated content floods the internet, the firm argues that credibility may increasingly come from provable skin in the game. Analysts, commentators, and creators could tie claims to onchain positions, locked tokens, or prediction markets that settle publicly.
Instead of asking audiences to trust neutrality, staked media asks them to verify incentives. It doesn’t replace traditional journalism but adds a new signal: not just what someone says, but what they’re willing to risk if they’re wrong.
That accountability question is already colliding with regulators. In Hong Kong, regulators have stepped up pressure in the JPEX case, adding new money laundering charges against crypto influencer Mr. Zhu. Prosecutors say millions moved through digital banks as he promoted the platform to followers, a reminder that “staked media” without transparency can flip fast from influence to legal risk when enforcement catches up.
Taken together, the report frames 2026 as the moment crypto grows up. Prediction markets start pricing uncertainty, zero-knowledge tools harden real infrastructure, and staked media puts credibility on the line. The throughline is blunt: crypto is most powerful when it stops posturing and quietly enforces what’s true.

