In the past two years, decentralized storage has gradually moved from concept to practice. Especially with the explosive growth of Web3 applications, the weaknesses of traditional cloud storage have become increasingly apparent—centralization, high costs, and censorship risks.
The Walrus protocol has taken a different approach. As a native project on the Sui chain, it is designed specifically to address the pain points of blockchain storage. Think about it, storing files on a regular blockchain? Limited on-chain space, skyrocketing gas fees—it's simply not feasible. Walrus's solution is to split data into blobs and use erasure coding techniques for redundancy distribution—so even if some nodes go offline, the entire file can still be fully recovered.
What’s the brilliance of this mechanism? It maximizes robustness while keeping costs far below AWS or Google Cloud. Developers can upload NFT metadata, game assets, AI models, or even corporate archives directly to Walrus. It provides decentralized persistence guarantees, and the data remains unchangeable.
Sui’s high throughput and parallel execution capabilities provide a strong technical foundation for Walrus. The Move language and object model are naturally compatible with Walrus’s storage architecture, significantly improving collaboration efficiency across the ecosystem. At the infrastructure level, decentralized storage is becoming a core track that Web3 cannot bypass. Walrus’s innovative significance is indeed promising.
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CafeMinor
· 12h ago
The erase coding system is indeed awesome; compared to traditional cloud storage, it's much more impressive.
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FreeMinter
· 12h ago
Walrus's erasure coding is indeed powerful, much more reliable than AWS's centralized solution... but whether it actually works well in practice might be another story.
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MysteryBoxAddict
· 13h ago
The erasure coding system should have been adopted long ago. Compared to traditional cloud storage operations that are constantly subject to censorship, it's truly a breath of fresh air.
In the past two years, decentralized storage has gradually moved from concept to practice. Especially with the explosive growth of Web3 applications, the weaknesses of traditional cloud storage have become increasingly apparent—centralization, high costs, and censorship risks.
The Walrus protocol has taken a different approach. As a native project on the Sui chain, it is designed specifically to address the pain points of blockchain storage. Think about it, storing files on a regular blockchain? Limited on-chain space, skyrocketing gas fees—it's simply not feasible. Walrus's solution is to split data into blobs and use erasure coding techniques for redundancy distribution—so even if some nodes go offline, the entire file can still be fully recovered.
What’s the brilliance of this mechanism? It maximizes robustness while keeping costs far below AWS or Google Cloud. Developers can upload NFT metadata, game assets, AI models, or even corporate archives directly to Walrus. It provides decentralized persistence guarantees, and the data remains unchangeable.
Sui’s high throughput and parallel execution capabilities provide a strong technical foundation for Walrus. The Move language and object model are naturally compatible with Walrus’s storage architecture, significantly improving collaboration efficiency across the ecosystem. At the infrastructure level, decentralized storage is becoming a core track that Web3 cannot bypass. Walrus’s innovative significance is indeed promising.