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I recently looked into an interesting project focused on RWA information oracles.
The core logic is straightforward—efficiently and securely providing real-world data to on-chain DApps as the informational foundation of applications. The project covers four main scenarios:
**Real Asset Digitization**. How traditional assets like real estate and stocks can have a digital counterpart on the chain, requiring reliable information sources for verification.
**Inter-Program Information Exchange**. Smart contracts need to securely exchange and invoke data, which requires a trusted intermediary layer.
**Event Prediction Applications**. Oracles for external events such as sports matches and election results, involving real-time information validation and accuracy.
**On-Chain Financial Services**. Lending protocols need precise valuation of collateral assets and must access real-time asset pricing data.
In essence, this project aims to address the issues of information credibility and interaction efficiency within the RWA ecosystem—enabling real-world assets to safely flow into the DApp ecosystem.
RWA is indeed a storm eye, and everyone can see the issue of source reliability. The key is whether this team can truly solve it.
With such high miner fee costs, can lending protocols really accept this price feed delay? I'm a bit skeptical.
Speaking of which, who will bear the centralization risk of asset pricing data? Or is it another round of the decentralization dream?
This approach feels similar to the wave of Oracle projects at the beginning of the year. And what happened? Nobody uses them anymore.
But I have to admit, after reviewing the technical aspects, I still have a bit of FOMO. This really aligns with my fate as a retail investor.