Sui has quickly emerged in the public chain sector due to its high throughput and low latency features. One of the most noteworthy supporting infrastructures is storage infrastructure like Walrus.
Its positioning is very clear—it's not just a file storage network, but aims to build a complete decentralized storage economy through the $WAL token. Use cases such as DeFi, privacy transactions, and dApp development can all be built on top of it.
How to understand this from a technical perspective? Walrus uses erasure coding technology to shard data and disperse storage. This brings a benefit: even if some nodes go offline, data remains complete and recoverable. Compared to centralized cloud storage solutions, costs can be several times lower, while also avoiding single point of failure risks and censorship. This is especially attractive for DeFi projects—user asset records, transaction history, and on-chain media content can all be stored without worrying about cloud service providers' attitudes.
The design of the $WAL token is even more worth dissecting. It serves three roles: governance rights (voting on protocol parameters and fee distribution), staking rights (locking $WAL to operate storage nodes and earn network rewards), and value capture (a portion of protocol fees used for buyback and burn or liquidity incentives). This mechanism makes $WAL not just a speculative asset but a rights token contributing to the ecosystem. The formation of a strong security consensus also stems from this staking-reward positive cycle.
In terms of privacy protection, users can enable end-to-end encryption to store sensitive data, maintaining full control over access permissions. This provides strong support for applications requiring data privacy (such as certain DeFi strategies and personal financial records). The entire design concept is: storage infrastructure → token incentives → ecosystem applications → network effects, forming a tightly linked cycle.
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DegenRecoveryGroup
· 11h ago
The walrus logic is indeed solid, with staking incentives + governance rights integrated... But to be honest, who still believes in storage public chains now? How many have died in the last round?
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StablecoinEnjoyer
· 11h ago
Suddenly I realized, the Walrus design is actually about completely opening up the storage black box. It's really good.
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GreenCandleCollector
· 11h ago
The storage track really deserves a good look; the idea behind Walrus is indeed different.
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ruggedSoBadLMAO
· 11h ago
This time, Sui's infrastructure is really being built seriously. Walrus's erasure coding approach is indeed quite hardcore, and the risk of single points of failure is completely eliminated.
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RektRecorder
· 11h ago
The Walrus logic is indeed well thought out, but the key still depends on whether the ecosystem can truly take off.
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GateUser-74b10196
· 11h ago
The walrus logic is indeed quite interesting; the staking incentives really solve the motivation problem for storage nodes.
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MEVVictimAlliance
· 11h ago
Walrus does seem to have some potential, but the $WAL token governance + staking model... isn't it going to be another "perfectly designed project that collapses in reality"?
Sui has quickly emerged in the public chain sector due to its high throughput and low latency features. One of the most noteworthy supporting infrastructures is storage infrastructure like Walrus.
Its positioning is very clear—it's not just a file storage network, but aims to build a complete decentralized storage economy through the $WAL token. Use cases such as DeFi, privacy transactions, and dApp development can all be built on top of it.
How to understand this from a technical perspective? Walrus uses erasure coding technology to shard data and disperse storage. This brings a benefit: even if some nodes go offline, data remains complete and recoverable. Compared to centralized cloud storage solutions, costs can be several times lower, while also avoiding single point of failure risks and censorship. This is especially attractive for DeFi projects—user asset records, transaction history, and on-chain media content can all be stored without worrying about cloud service providers' attitudes.
The design of the $WAL token is even more worth dissecting. It serves three roles: governance rights (voting on protocol parameters and fee distribution), staking rights (locking $WAL to operate storage nodes and earn network rewards), and value capture (a portion of protocol fees used for buyback and burn or liquidity incentives). This mechanism makes $WAL not just a speculative asset but a rights token contributing to the ecosystem. The formation of a strong security consensus also stems from this staking-reward positive cycle.
In terms of privacy protection, users can enable end-to-end encryption to store sensitive data, maintaining full control over access permissions. This provides strong support for applications requiring data privacy (such as certain DeFi strategies and personal financial records). The entire design concept is: storage infrastructure → token incentives → ecosystem applications → network effects, forming a tightly linked cycle.