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Walrus Protocol has been gaining attention for a while, and many people are curious about what it actually is. In simple terms, it is a decentralized storage solution launched by Mysten Labs, often regarded as the AWS of the blockchain world—sounds impressive, but the underlying logic deserves a clear explanation.
Compared to established storage projects like Filecoin and Arweave, Walrus has a different approach. It uses an encoding algorithm to fragment data and distribute it across network nodes. The cleverest part is that when reading data, there’s no need to contact all nodes—data can be fully reconstructed by retrieving from only a subset of nodes. The benefits of this approach are obvious—while ensuring data availability and security, it significantly reduces storage costs.
Why is this important? Cost determines survival. In traditional blockchain storage, maintaining full redundancy is costly. Walrus’s distributed encoding mechanism changes this equation. Data resilience (the ability to securely access and reconstruct data even when failures occur) is no longer at odds with cost; instead, both can be achieved simultaneously.
If you’re interested in Walrus’s token design, staking mechanisms, and how it operates within the Sui ecosystem, the economic design behind it is quite intriguing.