Web3 storage has yet to find a perfect solution. Think about what we need to store now—4K videos, 3D model files, AI model weights that are often dozens of GB, and even entire virtual world scene data. These big data sets pose unprecedented demands on storage.
Traditional solutions each have their pitfalls. Cloud storage platforms are stable, but your data's fate is entirely in their hands, with almost no transparency, and it can be censored or taken down at any time. What about decentralized solutions? They do protect data security, but using them is a nightmare—upload speeds are painfully slow, access latency can be several seconds, and costs are sky-high. I’ve personally tried using a well-known decentralized solution to store training data; it took half a day just to upload, and every access afterward required waiting a few seconds. Storing 1TB of data for a year can easily cost a few hundred dollars.
Mysten Labs’ Walrus protocol arrived just in time. It’s not just a simple upgrade of decentralized hard drives but a high-performance storage infrastructure designed specifically for modern application scenarios. The key is that it truly balances speed, cost, and security—three elements that are usually mutually restrictive—something rarely seen in previous solutions. Architecturally, Walrus introduces the concept of Blobs, redefining how large data blocks are stored, enabling it to maintain stable performance when handling TB-level data.
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GasFeeNightmare
· 2h ago
Hey, wait a minute. Can Walrus really solve this problem? It feels like another new concept hype.
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AirdropBuffet
· 6h ago
Huh? Still have to wait half a day for the upload, who can tolerate that... Walrus really needs to solve this pain point this time, or else we still have to obediently use cloud services.
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wrekt_but_learning
· 6h ago
Hey, wait a minute. Are decentralized solutions really that expensive? I feel like I've been ripped off.
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DeFiDoctor
· 6h ago
The consultation record shows that this guy treats the dilemma as a false proposition, but the clinical presentation is a bit outrageous—really saving 1TB for a few hundred dollars a year? I need to regularly review Walrus, the newcomer. The architecture sounds good, but what about the performance data? Risk warning: Promises of balancing the three key elements have been seen too often in DeFi.
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Degen4Breakfast
· 7h ago
A few hundred dollars a year to store 1TB? That's way too outrageous... But can Walrus really solve this pain point, or is it just another scam to fleece users?
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BearMarketBard
· 7h ago
Cloud storage is just that, data in someone else's hands doesn't feel secure, decentralized solutions are both expensive and slow, it's really a dilemma.
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LightningLady
· 7h ago
That's right, decentralized storage is really fast. Uploading a file can make your blood pressure soar. A few hundred dollars a year—who can resist? Walrus definitely needs to take a gamble on this wave.
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GasGoblin
· 7h ago
It's another old story about decentralized storage. Is Walrus really that amazing, or is it just built by burning money?
Web3 storage has yet to find a perfect solution. Think about what we need to store now—4K videos, 3D model files, AI model weights that are often dozens of GB, and even entire virtual world scene data. These big data sets pose unprecedented demands on storage.
Traditional solutions each have their pitfalls. Cloud storage platforms are stable, but your data's fate is entirely in their hands, with almost no transparency, and it can be censored or taken down at any time. What about decentralized solutions? They do protect data security, but using them is a nightmare—upload speeds are painfully slow, access latency can be several seconds, and costs are sky-high. I’ve personally tried using a well-known decentralized solution to store training data; it took half a day just to upload, and every access afterward required waiting a few seconds. Storing 1TB of data for a year can easily cost a few hundred dollars.
Mysten Labs’ Walrus protocol arrived just in time. It’s not just a simple upgrade of decentralized hard drives but a high-performance storage infrastructure designed specifically for modern application scenarios. The key is that it truly balances speed, cost, and security—three elements that are usually mutually restrictive—something rarely seen in previous solutions. Architecturally, Walrus introduces the concept of Blobs, redefining how large data blocks are stored, enabling it to maintain stable performance when handling TB-level data.