@Walrus 🦭/acc is a decentralized storage network built for large files that do not fit well on a blockchain. Instead of copying a whole file everywhere, the client encodes it into smaller pieces and spreads them across many storage nodes. A proof of availability is then recorded on Sui, so an app can check that the network accepted custody and is meant to keep the data available for the paid period.
I’m interested in Walrus because most “decentralized” apps still rely on fragile storage, and that is where projects quietly fail. They’re designing Walrus to handle churn and outages by using erasure coding, so the original file can be reconstructed from enough pieces even if many nodes are down. WAL is used to pay for storage and to align node incentives through staking, so availability is not just a promise, it is an economically enforced job. If you want to judge it, watch how fast proofs finalize on chain and how often files remain retrievable during stress. Here you learn if it protects users, not just theory, when stress hits.


WALUSDT
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