Traditional cloud storage seems cheap and easy to use, but there are many hidden risks—data can be leaked at any time, platforms can delete data at will, and prices are getting more expensive year after year.
The Walrus protocol takes a different approach. Built on the Sui blockchain, this decentralized network uses blob storage and erasure coding technology to make data truly permanently accessible, with no single point of control. Users upload data once and can store it long-term at low cost, holding the private keys entirely themselves.
This is especially useful for content creators and enterprises—videos, images, and documents are distributed across global nodes. Want to tamper with or delete them? No way. This distributed architecture is inherently resistant to censorship.
Comparing it to existing solutions highlights the differences. While Arweave claims to offer permanent storage, its prices are prohibitively expensive; IPFS is powerful but complex to access, and setting up a personal node can be a hassle. Walrus guarantees flexibility and is more economical, with much higher user-friendliness. By 2026, more and more dApps in the Sui ecosystem are integrating Walrus, and the overall growth momentum of the system is quite strong.
From a tokenomics perspective, $WAL incentivizes the entire network—stakers earn rewards by maintaining nodes, and governance participants decide on upgrade directions. All fees ultimately flow to token holders, creating a positive cycle. In this model, participants protect their data sovereignty while sharing in the ecosystem’s growth dividends.
The era of decentralized storage has indeed arrived, and Walrus is one of the most competitive players in this wave.
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SybilSlayer
· 5h ago
Arweave's price is really amazing, Walrus is definitely even more attractive this time
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DecentralizedElder
· 6h ago
Speaking of which, Walrus really got me excited; finally, there's a reliable choice.
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DaoResearcher
· 6h ago
According to the tokenomics model in the white paper, the incentive mechanism of $WAL relies on a key assumption—that the staker's returns are positively correlated with network growth. However, this vulnerability has been confirmed in highly decentralized market environments. It is worth noting that... and so on. Am I starting to self-PUA again?
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0xLuckbox
· 6h ago
Permanent storage sounds good, but I'm worried it might just be the next Arweave price trap.
Traditional cloud storage seems cheap and easy to use, but there are many hidden risks—data can be leaked at any time, platforms can delete data at will, and prices are getting more expensive year after year.
The Walrus protocol takes a different approach. Built on the Sui blockchain, this decentralized network uses blob storage and erasure coding technology to make data truly permanently accessible, with no single point of control. Users upload data once and can store it long-term at low cost, holding the private keys entirely themselves.
This is especially useful for content creators and enterprises—videos, images, and documents are distributed across global nodes. Want to tamper with or delete them? No way. This distributed architecture is inherently resistant to censorship.
Comparing it to existing solutions highlights the differences. While Arweave claims to offer permanent storage, its prices are prohibitively expensive; IPFS is powerful but complex to access, and setting up a personal node can be a hassle. Walrus guarantees flexibility and is more economical, with much higher user-friendliness. By 2026, more and more dApps in the Sui ecosystem are integrating Walrus, and the overall growth momentum of the system is quite strong.
From a tokenomics perspective, $WAL incentivizes the entire network—stakers earn rewards by maintaining nodes, and governance participants decide on upgrade directions. All fees ultimately flow to token holders, creating a positive cycle. In this model, participants protect their data sovereignty while sharing in the ecosystem’s growth dividends.
The era of decentralized storage has indeed arrived, and Walrus is one of the most competitive players in this wave.