In the decentralized storage space, Walrus Protocol offers an interesting set of solutions. Its core token WAL is not just an asset but also carries dual roles in governance and incentives — the community adjusts parameters through voting, nodes must stake WAL to operate, and delegators share in network rewards. This design encourages long-term participation.
In terms of token economics, over 60% of the total supply of 5 billion tokens is allocated to the community (airdrop, grants, subsidies), and users pay for storage which is gradually distributed to nodes and stakers. Interestingly, there is also a penalty mechanism to prevent speculation and encourage locking. Walrus adopts a dPoS mechanism, where nodes compete to attract delegations, leading to more efficient data distribution. Future plans include adding slashing to penalize malicious nodes.
On the technical side, Walrus is built on Sui, utilizing erasure coding and Seal privacy tools to support encrypted access control. On-chain verification of who can read private data is especially useful for DeFi-sensitive data or AI training datasets. Compared to existing solutions — Arweave emphasizes permanent immutability but at high costs, and Filecoin has slower retrieval — Walrus takes a flexible approach (supporting deletion and modification), offers faster speeds (via CDN acceleration), and is cost-effective.
Looking ahead to 2026, Walrus’s focus is on AI integration. There are already collaborations like Itheum for data tokenization and the CUDIS platform enabling users to sell health data for profit. Currently, data is monopolized by centralized giants, but Walrus aims to decentralize data, making it trustworthy, profitable, and privacy-preserving — opening up new possibilities.
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ImpermanentTherapist
· 01-10 15:59
Another storage project aiming to revolutionize the space? Built on Sui and still supporting deletion and modification? Isn't this just a weakened version?
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ContractCollector
· 01-09 06:41
Hmm, Walrus's approach is indeed good. The combination of dPoS + staking incentives still has some potential, but I'm worried about the subsequent increase in node centralization.
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SlowLearnerWang
· 01-09 02:38
Another storage project I haven't heard of... Wait, on the Sui chain? Alright, it seems that the dPoS system is indeed more mature, but can this thing really beat Filecoin? To be honest, I'm still a bit confused.
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WalletManager
· 01-08 04:57
The 60% flow to the community, I need to see clearly, and the proportion of airdrops must be calculated precisely, otherwise it’s easy to be diluted.
Hmm, the slashing mechanism is quite interesting. Can it really catch bad nodes? Has the smart contract been audited?
Running storage on the Sui chain is indeed more attractive than Filecoin in terms of speed, but for private key management, multi-signature is necessary for peace of mind.
The dPoS delegation mechanism sounds great, but how many genuine long-term holders can it really attract? That remains to be seen.
CDN acceleration + erasure coding—this combination is quite powerful, but can low storage costs really be sustainable? It depends on what the on-chain data says.
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CryptoGoldmine
· 01-08 04:56
Under the dPoS mechanism, the delegated yield ratio feels more transparent than the hash power earnings ratio of mainstream mining pools. The data showing 60% flowing to the community is quite interesting; we'll have to see how the actual distribution execution unfolds later.
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ForkTongue
· 01-08 04:51
dPoS + CDN acceleration is still quite effective; it's much faster than the sluggish Filecoin system. However, I still want to see if Slashing will actually be enforced, as these days, promised penalty mechanisms often turn out to be just for show.
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TradingNightmare
· 01-08 04:44
Wow, Walrus's combination of dPoS + privacy verification is indeed impressive and much more flexible than Arweave's "permanent block" approach.
Speaking of AI data... if it can truly decentralize and generate profits, the centralized giants would be getting nervous.
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LiquidationWatcher
· 01-08 04:34
dPoS + staking + governance—this combination really shows that Walrus is serious about their work, unlike some projects that just shout slogans... Much better than the retrieval delay issues of Filecoin.
In the decentralized storage space, Walrus Protocol offers an interesting set of solutions. Its core token WAL is not just an asset but also carries dual roles in governance and incentives — the community adjusts parameters through voting, nodes must stake WAL to operate, and delegators share in network rewards. This design encourages long-term participation.
In terms of token economics, over 60% of the total supply of 5 billion tokens is allocated to the community (airdrop, grants, subsidies), and users pay for storage which is gradually distributed to nodes and stakers. Interestingly, there is also a penalty mechanism to prevent speculation and encourage locking. Walrus adopts a dPoS mechanism, where nodes compete to attract delegations, leading to more efficient data distribution. Future plans include adding slashing to penalize malicious nodes.
On the technical side, Walrus is built on Sui, utilizing erasure coding and Seal privacy tools to support encrypted access control. On-chain verification of who can read private data is especially useful for DeFi-sensitive data or AI training datasets. Compared to existing solutions — Arweave emphasizes permanent immutability but at high costs, and Filecoin has slower retrieval — Walrus takes a flexible approach (supporting deletion and modification), offers faster speeds (via CDN acceleration), and is cost-effective.
Looking ahead to 2026, Walrus’s focus is on AI integration. There are already collaborations like Itheum for data tokenization and the CUDIS platform enabling users to sell health data for profit. Currently, data is monopolized by centralized giants, but Walrus aims to decentralize data, making it trustworthy, profitable, and privacy-preserving — opening up new possibilities.