Sideways markets are frustrating. Many people feel annoyed recently, especially with frequent hacker incidents—there's anxiety about where to store assets. Instead of staring at K-line charts all day, it's better to spend time researching things truly worth paying attention to.
Today I want to discuss a project I've been observing for a while—Walrus Protocol. Many people think "decentralized storage" is outdated, but this project's approach might change your perspective. It's not a cloud storage concept; it aims to become Web3's data security infrastructure.
**What does Walrus do?**
Simply put, it's a distributed storage system built on the Sui blockchain. The current problem is obvious: storing data on Ethereum is exorbitantly expensive, and using traditional cloud service providers means you have no control over your data—one hacker attack and the system could collapse.
Walrus's solution leverages Sui's inherent speed and low-cost advantages, using erasure coding technology. The core logic: your file gets encrypted, fragmented, then dispersed across thousands of nodes globally. If hackers try to steal it? They only get useless fragments. If institutions want to delete it? They can't find where the complete file is. Plus, costs are much lower.
**Why is it worth paying attention to?**
First, Walrus is a native storage protocol for the Sui ecosystem, completely different from projects forcefully integrated later. Everyone can clearly see how strong Sui has performed this cycle and how outstanding its performance is. Walrus directly inherits this speed advantage. As the Sui ecosystem expands, massive data generated by AI, gaming, and social applications will need storage—Walrus will be the first choice. This is an opportunity to passively benefit from ecosystem growth.
Reliable, this wave of Sui ecosystem really has substance. Walrus directly inherits the high-speed advantage, it's not that kind of hard-stacking setup.
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Hacking incidents are so frequent, data security really needs to be taken seriously. The idea of erasure coding with distributed storage is much more solid than centralized solutions.
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Another Sui chain project, once ecosystem applications take off, storage demand will really explode. Getting ahead of it won't hurt.
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Files broken up and scattered to global nodes, what hackers get is all garbage data, this logic is truly brilliant.
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Sideways trading is so uncomfortable anyway, might as well research things with real fundamentals. Walrus's thinking is more clearheaded than most storage projects.
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Sui's performance is there, costs are low, Walrus as a native protocol really has first-mover advantage.
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The pain point of Ethereum data storage being absurdly expensive hit the mark, Walrus's solution seems like it can solve it.
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Not a cloud storage concept, it's infrastructure, this positioning is a dimension higher than most projects.
Sideways markets are frustrating. Many people feel annoyed recently, especially with frequent hacker incidents—there's anxiety about where to store assets. Instead of staring at K-line charts all day, it's better to spend time researching things truly worth paying attention to.
Today I want to discuss a project I've been observing for a while—Walrus Protocol. Many people think "decentralized storage" is outdated, but this project's approach might change your perspective. It's not a cloud storage concept; it aims to become Web3's data security infrastructure.
**What does Walrus do?**
Simply put, it's a distributed storage system built on the Sui blockchain. The current problem is obvious: storing data on Ethereum is exorbitantly expensive, and using traditional cloud service providers means you have no control over your data—one hacker attack and the system could collapse.
Walrus's solution leverages Sui's inherent speed and low-cost advantages, using erasure coding technology. The core logic: your file gets encrypted, fragmented, then dispersed across thousands of nodes globally. If hackers try to steal it? They only get useless fragments. If institutions want to delete it? They can't find where the complete file is. Plus, costs are much lower.
**Why is it worth paying attention to?**
First, Walrus is a native storage protocol for the Sui ecosystem, completely different from projects forcefully integrated later. Everyone can clearly see how strong Sui has performed this cycle and how outstanding its performance is. Walrus directly inherits this speed advantage. As the Sui ecosystem expands, massive data generated by AI, gaming, and social applications will need storage—Walrus will be the first choice. This is an opportunity to passively benefit from ecosystem growth.