Imagine holding a magic mirror in your hand. When shattered into thousands of pieces, each tiny shard can reflect the entire world—not just a corner of it. This "fragmented yet complete" miracle is the technological revolution that the Walrus protocol is demonstrating in the field of decentralized storage.
As of early 2026, Web3 is undergoing a profound shift from "financialization" to "datafication." Large model training data, on-chain gaming assets, decentralized social content... these massive amounts of information urgently need an outlet. But what about traditional distributed storage solutions? They always swing between "high-cost redundancy" and "inefficient recovery."
Walrus's "proof of storage" approach takes a different perspective—it aims to build a "genetic backtracking system" for the digital world.
**Why don't we need "copies"?**
The logic of traditional decentralized storage is like a photocopy shop. Want to ensure data isn't lost? Then store a copy on hard drives around the world. Security is security, but the cost is huge bandwidth waste and storage redundancy.
Walrus uses erasure coding technology. Sounds academic? Actually, it's like a high-dimensional Sudoku game—it doesn't store a complete copy of the file but encodes the data into a series of related fragments.
The most amazing part: even if half or more of the nodes in the entire network go offline simultaneously, as long as you still hold a small portion of the remaining fragments, you can fully recover the original data. This is true resilient storage.
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LightningPacketLoss
· 17h ago
The erasure coding approach is indeed powerful, saving much more cost compared to traditional naive replication. The only concern is that if nodes are too scattered, recovery might experience delays.
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TokenVelocity
· 01-12 08:50
The erasure coding trick is indeed brilliant, saving costs without dropping the chain. Compared to the traditional foolish method of storing ten copies, it's much better. Web3 storage has finally got it right.
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fren_with_benefits
· 01-12 08:50
Erasure coding is truly amazing; finally, someone has figured out how to master storage.
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DaisyUnicorn
· 01-12 08:50
The erasure code, this little flower, really cured the bloated redundancy problem.
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NewPumpamentals
· 01-12 08:44
The erasure coding system should have been popularized long ago; traditional redundancy schemes are just burning money... The Walrus approach indeed has some merit.
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ZkProofPudding
· 01-12 08:37
Erasure coding is really powerful; it's much better than those foolproof backup methods.
Imagine holding a magic mirror in your hand. When shattered into thousands of pieces, each tiny shard can reflect the entire world—not just a corner of it. This "fragmented yet complete" miracle is the technological revolution that the Walrus protocol is demonstrating in the field of decentralized storage.
As of early 2026, Web3 is undergoing a profound shift from "financialization" to "datafication." Large model training data, on-chain gaming assets, decentralized social content... these massive amounts of information urgently need an outlet. But what about traditional distributed storage solutions? They always swing between "high-cost redundancy" and "inefficient recovery."
Walrus's "proof of storage" approach takes a different perspective—it aims to build a "genetic backtracking system" for the digital world.
**Why don't we need "copies"?**
The logic of traditional decentralized storage is like a photocopy shop. Want to ensure data isn't lost? Then store a copy on hard drives around the world. Security is security, but the cost is huge bandwidth waste and storage redundancy.
Walrus uses erasure coding technology. Sounds academic? Actually, it's like a high-dimensional Sudoku game—it doesn't store a complete copy of the file but encodes the data into a series of related fragments.
The most amazing part: even if half or more of the nodes in the entire network go offline simultaneously, as long as you still hold a small portion of the remaining fragments, you can fully recover the original data. This is true resilient storage.