Here's the hard truth: centralized cloud providers introduce real operational risk. When your app can't handle regional outages or surprise price hikes, you're sitting on a ticking time bomb. The gap keeps widening between what legacy infrastructure can handle and what modern applications actually need.
Fast forward a few years. Failed applications won't crash from poorly written code anymore—that's been largely solved. They'll crumble because of brittle infrastructure dependencies. The ones betting on decentralized, resilient architectures? They'll be the survivors.
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ZKProofster
· 6h ago
ngl, the "surprise price hikes" bit hits different when you're actually running production systems. but let's be real—most teams still won't migrate until it breaks catastrophically. that's just how this works.
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NFTBlackHole
· 9h ago
Centralized cloud services are a trap; sooner or later, you'll have to jump out. When regional failures occur, prices will surge dramatically, and it'll be too late to regret.
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OnChainArchaeologist
· 9h ago
Centralized cloud service providers are long overdue for elimination. Prices are arbitrarily increased, services are arbitrarily suspended—those who use them get exploited...
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ContractExplorer
· 9h ago
Centralized cloud services should have been eliminated long ago. Price gouging, server crashes and passing the buck—who can tolerate this?
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SnapshotDayLaborer
· 9h ago
Centralized cloud services will eventually fail, and this time it's really true.
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AmateurDAOWatcher
· 9h ago
Centralized cloud services are really a ticking time bomb; when prices rise, accounts will directly explode. In the future, it's not the poorly coded projects that will die, but those with fragile infrastructure and no Plan B.
Here's the hard truth: centralized cloud providers introduce real operational risk. When your app can't handle regional outages or surprise price hikes, you're sitting on a ticking time bomb. The gap keeps widening between what legacy infrastructure can handle and what modern applications actually need.
Fast forward a few years. Failed applications won't crash from poorly written code anymore—that's been largely solved. They'll crumble because of brittle infrastructure dependencies. The ones betting on decentralized, resilient architectures? They'll be the survivors.