In the current era of generative AI explosion, data storage faces new challenges—massive training datasets, generated videos, and model weights, where should they be stored? Traditional cloud service providers' centralized solutions expose drawbacks such as single points of failure, censorship risks, and high costs. Walrus Protocol offers an alternative possibility: a decentralized storage network built on the Sui blockchain, specifically optimized for AI large-file scenarios.
The core technology of this system lies in distributed Blob storage. Simply put, Walrus encrypts and shards your data, then disperses it across nodes worldwide. The benefits of this approach are obvious—no risk of single points of failure, data censorship resistance, and each file can be verified on-chain to prove its integrity. In contrast, traditional cloud services often fall into the trust dilemma of "I say it's complete, so it is," whereas Walrus provides you with ironclad guarantees through cryptography. Cost-wise, it's also not in the same league—developers uploading data can enjoy significant cost advantages and faster read speeds.
The ecosystem's operation relies on the WAL token. With a total supply of 5 billion, this token plays multiple roles: paying for storage fees, incentivizing operation nodes, and participating in community governance. Holders can not only receive transaction fee discounts but also vote on protocol upgrades, truly participating in project decisions. The stable mechanism design anchors WAL to real-world value, avoiding speculative volatility from interfering with practical applications.
For developers, this opens up new possibilities. Building data markets based on Walrus becomes easier, resource sharing costs decrease, and the barriers to innovation are lowered. Ordinary users are no longer passive data providers but true data owners. This is what decentralized storage should look like—allowing every participant to benefit from it.
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PumpStrategist
· 01-12 10:21
5 billion supply, "stability mechanism design," as soon as I see this term, I become alert. It's a typical academic disguise for hype.
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CrashHotline
· 01-11 17:19
Honestly, Walrus sounds really comfortable, but the key is whether the WAL token will be overhyped and inflated.
Wait, can the Sui ecosystem really handle such a large amount of data? I'm a bit worried.
Decentralized storage sounds appealing, but in practice, can its speed and cost really outperform AWS?
It seems like solving a real problem, but will investors turn it into the next hype object?
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BearMarketGardener
· 01-10 23:45
Honestly, I understand the distributed storage logic of Walrus, but I don't know to what extent it can actually be implemented.
Damn, how significant does the cost advantage need to be to truly disrupt cloud services?
The 5 billion supply of WAL tokens... feels like another story altogether.
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LayerZeroHero
· 01-09 12:31
It has proven that no one has really done a good job in distributed storage. I need to test the specific efficiency data of the Blob sharding verification logic.
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Cryptography guarantees sound good, but can single points of failure really be completely avoided? Want to see attack vector analysis.
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50 billion WAL supply anchored to real-world value? It depends on how robust the stability mechanism design is before I believe it.
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Oh, finally a project that makes users actual data owners. The previous cloud service providers really needed to be dealt with.
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How does this protocol architecture on Sui compare in interoperability with other chains, and what are the asset migration costs?
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I'm interested in on-chain integrity verification. Are there specific data comparing actual write/read speeds with AWS S3?
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Is the read speed really a significant advantage? Or is it just another idealistic description? Let's wait and see after launch.
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rugpull_survivor
· 01-09 10:56
Another storage solution, is the Sui ecosystem about to take off again? Just talking about technical prowess is everywhere; the real winners are those who can survive.
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0xSherlock
· 01-09 10:54
Wait, AWS has been sidelined? Now the power to store data is back in the users' hands.
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shadowy_supercoder
· 01-09 10:49
Hey, isn't this talking about the storage layer solution of the Sui ecosystem? Finally, someone is seriously working on this.
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BloodInStreets
· 01-09 10:44
Another "revolutionary" decentralized storage, sounds like boosting morale during the bottoming phase.
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CommunitySlacker
· 01-09 10:43
Now cloud service providers are getting nervous; distributed storage is really coming to take their jobs.
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OnChainSleuth
· 01-09 10:42
Interesting, the Sui ecosystem is shaking things up again. But honestly, decentralized storage has been hyped for years, and there are very few that are truly usable.
In the current era of generative AI explosion, data storage faces new challenges—massive training datasets, generated videos, and model weights, where should they be stored? Traditional cloud service providers' centralized solutions expose drawbacks such as single points of failure, censorship risks, and high costs. Walrus Protocol offers an alternative possibility: a decentralized storage network built on the Sui blockchain, specifically optimized for AI large-file scenarios.
The core technology of this system lies in distributed Blob storage. Simply put, Walrus encrypts and shards your data, then disperses it across nodes worldwide. The benefits of this approach are obvious—no risk of single points of failure, data censorship resistance, and each file can be verified on-chain to prove its integrity. In contrast, traditional cloud services often fall into the trust dilemma of "I say it's complete, so it is," whereas Walrus provides you with ironclad guarantees through cryptography. Cost-wise, it's also not in the same league—developers uploading data can enjoy significant cost advantages and faster read speeds.
The ecosystem's operation relies on the WAL token. With a total supply of 5 billion, this token plays multiple roles: paying for storage fees, incentivizing operation nodes, and participating in community governance. Holders can not only receive transaction fee discounts but also vote on protocol upgrades, truly participating in project decisions. The stable mechanism design anchors WAL to real-world value, avoiding speculative volatility from interfering with practical applications.
For developers, this opens up new possibilities. Building data markets based on Walrus becomes easier, resource sharing costs decrease, and the barriers to innovation are lowered. Ordinary users are no longer passive data providers but true data owners. This is what decentralized storage should look like—allowing every participant to benefit from it.