Ladies and gentlemen, today let's talk about something practical—have you ever wondered how much of the money you pay to cloud storage providers each year is actually valuable, and how much is just wasted? Recently, I took a deep dive into a project called Walrus Protocol. This thing is quite ambitious, aiming to fundamentally change the pricing structure of the storage market. What's its secret weapon? Decentralization +全民参与 (全民参与 means "mass participation"), giving everyone the opportunity to become a storage provider.



Let's start with the technically hardcore part. This protocol uses the Red Stuff algorithm, which is indeed quite impressive. Do you know that traditional decentralized storage solutions (like a well-known scheme) usually replicate data more than ten times to ensure data security? That's a huge waste. Walrus only needs 4 to 5 copies to achieve the same level of reliability. What's the secret? They store files by splitting them into "Lego blocks," so even if some data is lost, it can be fully restored through mathematical algorithms. Just looking at the testnet data is quite shocking—storing a large 1TB file can save over 60% of Gas fees compared to traditional schemes. This is a real boon for Web3 developers because those fuel costs can really drive you crazy.

But saving costs alone isn't enough; it also has to be user-friendly. I tried their Quilt upload tool, especially for scenarios involving massive numbers of small files—for example, a million images needed for AI model training. Uploading them one by one using traditional methods? That would take forever. Quilt uses batch upload, which is about three times faster, significantly improving efficiency. There's also a thoughtful detail: you can customize storage strategies, such as prioritizing European nodes for European users' data (to comply with GDPR), or storing Asian users' data in Asia (to reduce access latency). This flexibility and localization capability is something that some large companies need to open a bunch of support tickets to handle, but they can do it directly through configuration.

The ecosystem construction is also steadily progressing. Through deep cooperation with the Sui public chain, Walrus is gradually expanding its application scenarios within that ecosystem, and there’s still plenty of room for imagination.
WAL-0,73%
SUI0,48%
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SerumSquirtervip
· 6h ago
Save 60% on gas fees? Sounds good, but can it stay stable once launched? --- Quilt batch upload triples speed—really? Let’s find a big shot to test it out. --- Redstuff algorithm LEGO block restoration sounds like black tech, but I’m still skeptical. --- Another Sui ecosystem—this guy really bets all his chips on Sui. --- Decentralized storage has so many failure cases; why would this time be any different? --- Saving on gas fees really hits the pain point for Web3 developers, wallets are crying the loudest. --- GDPR localized storage? Interesting, finally someone thought of this. --- 4 to 5 redundancies are enough? Who guarantees data integrity? Is there an audit report?
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BearMarketBardvip
· 6h ago
Saving 60% of the gas, this number is indeed quite impressive.
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SellTheBouncevip
· 6h ago
Sounds good, but testnet data is often the most misleading. Let's wait until the mainnet runs for a year or so, there will always be lower points.
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FlashLoanPhantomvip
· 6h ago
Save 60% on Gas fees? This guy isn't bragging, is he? Is it real or fake... Walrus sounds pretty good, but I'm worried it's just another "revolutionary" project that will quietly disappear in the end. I need to dig into the code of the Red Stuff algorithm myself; just reading the white paper is always like this. The Sui ecosystem collaboration is somewhat interesting, but when will it truly be implemented? Lego block storage—why does this concept seem so much like an upgraded version of IPFs... Four or five redundancies are indeed more appealing than ten or more. I understand the logic of saving gas, but the key is who will ensure the data is truly secure. Quilt three times faster? Let's test it with a large file before bragging. Feels like the old Web3 trick again: save money first, safety always comes last. This time, I think it's just another attempt to compete with Arweave. With the storage race so fierce, why can Walrus break through?
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