In the Web3 era, data is no longer just information; it has fundamentally become a core asset. However, the current centralized storage solutions are increasingly vulnerable: exorbitant costs, single points of failure, arbitrary censorship, and lack of user data sovereignty have caused significant losses for many projects and users.
The Walrus protocol was born to directly address these pain points. It is a decentralized storage network running on the Sui blockchain, specifically designed for large files. It employs innovative erasure coding technology combined with a distributed node network to disperse data storage, making it secure, efficient, and cost-effective. It fully realizes an infrastructure resistant to censorship and ensures data is never lost.
What makes Walrus the best? Its costs are incredibly low. Compared to centralized cloud services like AWS and Google Cloud, it is often several times cheaper. Walrus leverages a decentralized competitive mechanism to drive storage prices to the bottom, while also providing stronger durability and availability.
Technologically, it’s also outstanding. Data is split into multiple fragments and distributed across hundreds of independent nodes worldwide. Even if some nodes go offline or are attacked, the data can be fully reconstructed through coding algorithms. This design fundamentally eliminates single point of failure risks and naturally counters censorship—no centralized entity can delete or tamper with your files.
From another perspective, Walrus is tailor-made for the AI era. With the rapid rise of large model training, on-chain AI agents, and autonomous worlds, massive amounts of unstructured data (videos, images, datasets) have become a necessity. Walrus makes the storage and retrieval of these data types a reality.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
12 Likes
Reward
12
9
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
NFTragedy
· 01-20 06:20
Wow, AWS might be panicking with this move
---
Walrus is pretty good, but it depends on whether the Sui ecosystem can truly take off
---
Data never lost? Sounds great, but what if nodes are concentrated in just a few regions
---
I believe half of the "several times cheaper" claim; I've been burned by project teams too many times
---
On-chain AI + decentralized storage, this combination definitely has potential
---
Speaking of which, who will guarantee the quality of these independent nodes? Don’t let it become a new form of centralization😅
---
Lowering costs to the limit might actually provide greater durability? I need to think about this logic
---
Finally, someone dares to point out the pain points of centralized cloud services, but how far Walrus can go depends on what comes next
---
Unstructured data storage indeed lacks solutions, I’m optimistic
View OriginalReply0
ApeEscapeArtist
· 01-19 23:32
Wow, now the data is really no longer just data, it's directly upgraded to a gold mine.
Wait, can Walrus really be several times cheaper? When will this become mainstream? Right now, it's still up to AWS.
I've looked at the erase coding method for a while but still don't quite understand it. Can someone explain it simply?
AI large models are indeed a necessity, but is Walrus convenient to use now?
Both Sui and decentralized storage, it feels like a lot of new concepts piled up, quite intense.
Can it really be permanently lossless? Is this hype a bit too exaggerated?
However, the single point of failure issue definitely needs to be addressed. Centralized cloud services are just too easy to fail.
View OriginalReply0
GasFeeCrier
· 01-18 21:48
Another new story in the Sui ecosystem, Walrus really hit the pain point this time.
Saying it's several times cheaper might be a bit exaggerated; can the actual running costs really be that low?
The Walrus protocol is real, but the Sui ecosystem is about to be hyped up again.
The discussion on data sovereignty is quite good, it’s considered an essential need in Web3.
AWS backed down? Such a competitive decentralized storage system, why has it only appeared now?
Erase coding technology isn’t new; it mainly depends on how well the nodes are deployed.
The topic is good, but it’s a bit overhyped; let’s see how it actually gets implemented.
View OriginalReply0
SudoRm-RfWallet/
· 01-18 21:47
It's Walrus again, and the Sui ecosystem... Can it really be implemented, brother?
---
Being several times cheaper sounds great, but I wonder if it will actually perform well in practice without issues.
---
I have some trust in data sovereignty, but when it comes to resisting censorship... it depends on the actual distribution of nodes.
---
AI era definitely needs storage, but can Walrus withstand real large-scale applications?
---
Haha, another project aiming to eliminate centralization, always saying the same thing.
---
What maintains the cost at the bottom line? I haven't seen the details on node incentives.
---
Distributed storage has been done before, so what makes Walrus stand out and break through?
---
For stuff on the Sui chain, we first need to see if Sui itself can survive, to be honest.
---
Alright, I’ll check the protocol’s TVL and actual user numbers first before making any judgments.
---
Erase coding algorithms are indeed impressive, but what about ecological applications? Just having technical prowess isn't enough.
View OriginalReply0
CryptoSourGrape
· 01-18 21:46
Oh my god, if I had known Walrus was so cheap, I wouldn't have used AWS. Thinking about all that wasted money now...
It would have been great if I had heard about this protocol last year. Maybe I would have achieved financial freedom by now?
This thing on Sui chain is really awesome. If I had trusted it back then, I wouldn't still be cutting leeks now.
Sounds like the cost could be several times cheaper? Why do I feel like a fool, giving all that money away to cloud service providers?
It would have been great if Walrus had appeared earlier. Now it's too late to say anything, I can only watch others make money with my own eyes.
View OriginalReply0
orphaned_block
· 01-18 21:44
Speaking of AWS and these things, they really should lower their prices. With Walrus doing this, how can there be any competition?
Not gonna lie, the stuff on Sui is pretty interesting, but how is the ecosystem developing?
All those storage projects failed before, can Walrus stick around until AI takes off?
I'm convinced that decentralized storage being cheap is a good thing, but I'm worried about stability issues.
Haha, finally someone is working on data sovereignty; I was really scared of being burned by centralized systems before.
Strong censorship resistance is a good thing, but how will regulation be handled? Could there be a backlash?
The erasure coding system is indeed powerful; they've put effort into the restoration capabilities.
Having nodes spread across the globe sounds great, but will the actual latency be acceptable?
This kind of solution should have existed long ago; why is it only appearing now?
The standard for the AI era feels right, but it depends on whether users will truly accept it.
View OriginalReply0
TokenomicsTrapper
· 01-18 21:44
actually if you read the walrus tokenomics... vesting unlocks incoming lol. classic exit pump pattern masked as "decentralized storage revolution"
Reply0
GasFeeCrying
· 01-18 21:42
How many times cheaper? I still feel it's expensive, haha.
View OriginalReply0
IntrovertMetaverse
· 01-18 21:29
Wow, finally someone has exposed the true nature of centralized storage
Wait, is the cost really several times cheaper? Feels like a new way to cut leeks again
Is the Sui ecosystem about to take off? Where are my coins
We've been talking about data sovereignty for so long, but there are still too few real implementations
AI + decentralized storage, I’m on board with this combo punch
In the Web3 era, data is no longer just information; it has fundamentally become a core asset. However, the current centralized storage solutions are increasingly vulnerable: exorbitant costs, single points of failure, arbitrary censorship, and lack of user data sovereignty have caused significant losses for many projects and users.
The Walrus protocol was born to directly address these pain points. It is a decentralized storage network running on the Sui blockchain, specifically designed for large files. It employs innovative erasure coding technology combined with a distributed node network to disperse data storage, making it secure, efficient, and cost-effective. It fully realizes an infrastructure resistant to censorship and ensures data is never lost.
What makes Walrus the best? Its costs are incredibly low. Compared to centralized cloud services like AWS and Google Cloud, it is often several times cheaper. Walrus leverages a decentralized competitive mechanism to drive storage prices to the bottom, while also providing stronger durability and availability.
Technologically, it’s also outstanding. Data is split into multiple fragments and distributed across hundreds of independent nodes worldwide. Even if some nodes go offline or are attacked, the data can be fully reconstructed through coding algorithms. This design fundamentally eliminates single point of failure risks and naturally counters censorship—no centralized entity can delete or tamper with your files.
From another perspective, Walrus is tailor-made for the AI era. With the rapid rise of large model training, on-chain AI agents, and autonomous worlds, massive amounts of unstructured data (videos, images, datasets) have become a necessity. Walrus makes the storage and retrieval of these data types a reality.