Staking FLT isn’t about passive yield for its own sake. It’s a security and coordination mechanism. When providers stake FLT, they’re committing real compute capacity to the network. That stake becomes a guarantee that the cloudless platform stays reliable, scalable, and permissionless.
What’s intriguing is the shift in mindset. Instead of trusting a single cloud provider, Fluence spreads responsibility across many operators, with incentives aligned on-chain. The APR you see is a reflection of real demand for decentralized compute, not abstract inflation.
This is DePIN applied to the cloud stack: stake → onboard compute → serve workloads → earn.
For anyone curious about decentralized infrastructure, this page is a good snapshot of how Web3 is turning cloud services into an open, verifiable network.
👉 fluence.network