Are you also concerned about privacy issues in on-chain transactions? Or worried that entrusting important data to cloud service providers might lead to arbitrary access?
Walrus, a protocol built on the Sui blockchain, addresses these headaches perfectly. Relying on Sui's high-performance infrastructure, Walrus not only protects your transaction privacy—preventing your operation records from being easily inspected—but also offers a complete decentralized governance framework. Participating in voting, staking tokens to earn rewards—these are all natively supported.
The most interesting part is its storage solution. Instead of uploading entire files to a single service provider’s server, Walrus uses a technology called "erasure coding"—simply put, it splits your large files into countless small fragments and disperses them across various nodes in the network. The benefits are obvious: even if some storage nodes go offline, your data can still be fully recovered; costs are lower; and there's no need to worry about censorship or single points of failure.
Whether you're an individual user looking for a secure alternative to cloud storage, or a business seeking a more flexible and cost-effective data management solution than traditional methods, the design behind the Walrus protocol can meet your needs. Safe, decentralized, and practical to use—this is its core competitive advantage.
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LiquidityWitch
· 12h ago
erasure coding... it's literally just shattering data into arcane fragments and scattering them across the nodes. the real alchemy here? watching traditional cloud providers squirm as their single-point-of-failure empire crumbles. walrus isn't just protocol design, it's portfolio transmutation waiting to happen
Reply0
potentially_notable
· 01-08 05:57
Erasure coding sounds cool, but can it really be reliable in practice...
View OriginalReply0
SelfMadeRuggee
· 01-08 05:57
Erasure coding sounds good in theory, but how does it work in practice? With so many nodes, wouldn't it actually slow things down?
View OriginalReply0
BearMarketBuyer
· 01-08 05:49
Erasure coding sounds pretty impressive, but will it be a different story when it’s actually implemented in practice...
View OriginalReply0
ChainProspector
· 01-08 05:48
Erase coding sounds pretty awesome, but does anyone actually use it?
View OriginalReply0
ZenZKPlayer
· 01-08 05:45
The concept of erasure coding sounds good, but whether it can be truly used depends on its adoption rate.
View OriginalReply0
MetaMaximalist
· 01-08 05:29
erasure coding isn't exactly groundbreaking—been around since the 90s honestly. what *is* interesting is walrus actually making it work at scale on sui's throughput. ngl though, if you're still worried about "cloud oversight" in 2024, you're already late to understanding why decentralized storage never went mainstream. adoption curves tell the story here.
Are you also concerned about privacy issues in on-chain transactions? Or worried that entrusting important data to cloud service providers might lead to arbitrary access?
Walrus, a protocol built on the Sui blockchain, addresses these headaches perfectly. Relying on Sui's high-performance infrastructure, Walrus not only protects your transaction privacy—preventing your operation records from being easily inspected—but also offers a complete decentralized governance framework. Participating in voting, staking tokens to earn rewards—these are all natively supported.
The most interesting part is its storage solution. Instead of uploading entire files to a single service provider’s server, Walrus uses a technology called "erasure coding"—simply put, it splits your large files into countless small fragments and disperses them across various nodes in the network. The benefits are obvious: even if some storage nodes go offline, your data can still be fully recovered; costs are lower; and there's no need to worry about censorship or single points of failure.
Whether you're an individual user looking for a secure alternative to cloud storage, or a business seeking a more flexible and cost-effective data management solution than traditional methods, the design behind the Walrus protocol can meet your needs. Safe, decentralized, and practical to use—this is its core competitive advantage.