We have a new monetary operating system, called the Internet-native financial cloud service, but most people still cannot access it.
Written by: Ignas Survila
Translated by: AididiaoJP, Foresight News
Money is experiencing its own "Internet moment."
The Internet has long had its communication systems (email), publishing platforms (blogs, social media), and commercial systems (Stripe, Shopify). Now, it is building its own financial system. This system is inherently programmable, open by default, and borderless from day one. It is being built on the underlying protocol of stablecoins.
But the key is: although the infrastructure is emerging, we still lack the crucial user experience. And history tells us that it is here that the biggest winners are crowned.
Every cool technological revolution starts with infrastructure, but no one remembers the protocols—everyone remembers the products that made them usable.
In 1982, the Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP) made email possible. However, it wasn't until 2004, when Gmail launched with its clean product, massive storage, and effective spam filters, that email truly became widespread.
Search engines existed long before Google. AltaVista, Archie, Lycos. But Google simplified everything—it was faster, cleaner, and smarter.
Skype did not invent the Internet Voice Protocol (VoIP), and WhatsApp did not invent instant messaging, but they made these technologies accessible to ordinary people.
Stablecoins are helping to create an Internet-native financial system.
And this is not theoretical—it is already running.
We have never seen financial infrastructure scale so rapidly, especially across borders. Stablecoins have already reached millions of users worldwide. There are good reasons for this: they are fast, borderless, denominated in U.S. dollars, and run on open protocols. In a world where 1.4 billion people lack adequate financial services and even more are subject to capital controls or volatile local currencies, stablecoins offer something revolutionary: an interface to the global dollar network, accessible from anywhere with just a smartphone.
But the problem is: if you try to use stablecoins today, you quickly hit a wall. The payment experience is clunky, onboarding is confusing, and everything is wrapped in jargon, wallets, gas fees, networks, and cross-chain bridges.
This is where the gap lies. We have a new monetary operating system, called the Internet-native financial cloud, but most people still cannot access it.
It's like getting a PS2 steering wheel for Christmas but not having a PlayStation to plug it into. A huge opportunity is right in front of us: to make all of this feel normal, invisible, and seamless.
In fintech, having users means having user relationships. Trust is built here, user behavior is shaped here, and long-term value is created here.
Although user experience is rarely the strongest argument in strategic meetings, in fintech, it is everything. Because this is not just software—this is money. And money requires trust.
Just look at the most successful cases in neobanking: Revolut, Cash App, Nubank. These companies operate in different markets, but they all follow the same strategy: providing a world-class user experience.
As stablecoins enter their next stage of adoption, the real winners will be the brands people trust when sending money to family, the cards they instinctively use to pay for lunch, and the apps that quietly replace their local banks. It will be the experience that makes stablecoins invisible, making them feel like ordinary money. Ordinary, but globally accepted.
What makes this moment so urgent and exciting is the convergence of three forces:
This is not a speculative hype cycle. This is the maturity of infrastructure, regulation paving the way, and a huge consumer market waiting to be served. Billions of people still lack access to modern financial tools and services, but they have smartphones, Internet access, and are becoming increasingly familiar with stablecoins. The underlying protocols are finally in place. Now it's a race to build the experience layer that brings everything to life.
We believe that the most underestimated move in fintech today is building a stablecoin experience that feels like Apple Pay—an experience that blends into the background, just works, and wins by being obvious, trustworthy, and globally accepted.