I’m looking at Walrus because it treats storage as something you can verify instead of just trust. It works with Sui as a control layer: the large blob data stays offchain, while Sui holds the metadata and a proof that enough storage nodes accepted custody. Walrus encodes each file into many small fragments, spreads them across independent operators, and can repair missing fragments when nodes churn, which is normal in open networks. They’re rewarded in WAL over time for keeping data available, and staking helps decide who participates and how incentives are enforced. For builders this means media, datasets, app assets, and archives can be stored without relying on one company, and availability can be checked using onchain records. The purpose is to make durable, auditable data storage feel like public infrastructure that resists censorship and reduces single points of failure. It also introduced Quilt to bundle small files with less overhead, and Seal can add encryption and onchain access rules when confidentiality matters. The main risk is incentive drift, so uptime, repair speed, and stake concentration are worth watching.


WALUSDT
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