In the past decade of blockchain, we've been obsessed with speed. Computing power is soaring, throughput is breaking records, but there's a fatal flaw that's always been overlooked—how does the data survive?



The internet is like a person with amnesia. It runs fast enough, but key information is always at risk of being lost at any moment. Walrus's core value is actually quite simple: to equip Web3 with a true "long-term memory."

Looking from the beginning of 2026, the competition for infrastructure has shifted to a new track. It’s no longer about "who runs the fastest" but about "who can last the longest." That’s why investing in infrastructure should prioritize WAL—not only because the technology sounds advanced, but because it truly fills a deep gap in Web3.

**The Old Storage Dilemma**

Decentralized storage has been swinging between two extremes. Filecoin is like a massive archive buried underground—data is stored securely but retrieving it can take ages; meanwhile, some DA layers are like temporary sticky notes, only usable for a few days. Neither is ideal.

Walrus breaks this deadlock with the Redway protocol. Simply put, Redway is like a "holographic magic" in the digital realm. It doesn't just fragment and disperse data; it transforms data into a self-healing signal system through erasure coding technology.

What does this mean? Even if half the nodes in the network go offline suddenly due to various reasons (natural disasters, regulatory fluctuations, hardware failures), the remaining nodes can still reconstruct the complete data like assembling Lego blocks. This is true resilience.
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NotFinancialAdviservip
· 2h ago
Wait, is Filecoin really that slow? I feel like everyone is praising Walrus but no one has actually used it...
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LeekCuttervip
· 3h ago
Speed is useless if it's just a chicken feather; losing data makes everything else pointless... Over the past few years, I've heard too many stories of TPS breaking records, but what was the result? Filecoin is painfully slow at storing data, the DA layer is unreliable, and the WAL approach really hits the pain point.
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FromMinerToFarmervip
· 3h ago
To be honest, the hype about speed has definitely been exaggerated. I've been annoyed by the issue of data loss for a long time; every time it's rushed and ends up empty-handed. Walrus's approach is correct, but can Redway really be as impressive as described, or is it just another plan that sounds good but doesn't actually work?
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SleepyValidatorvip
· 3h ago
Someone finally said it: the era of speed demons should end. If the data can't survive, everything is pointless. I'm really fed up with Filecoin's snail pace. Walrus's approach indeed hits the mark. Self-healing erasure codes? Sounds impressive, but I just want to know if it actually works in practice or if it's just another tall tale. Wait, does this mean that even if a large number of nodes go down, recovery is still possible? That's much more solid than some DApp layers; there's real substance. True infrastructure should be like this—being able to last a long time is a hundred times more important than just being fast.
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SeeYouInFourYearsvip
· 3h ago
I really didn't expect that after all this time, we're still playing the "speed game," and data loss has surprisingly become a blind spot... Walrus's Redway protocol sounds really impressive, especially with its self-healing erasure coding. But don't be too harsh on Filecoin either; slow is slow, but at least it's reliable, haha.
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AirdropDreamervip
· 3h ago
Honestly, the internal competition for speed has become quite tiring, and finally someone dares to talk about data survivability. Filecoin's approach is indeed too dull, but Walrus's idea sounds quite different, with erasure coding and self-healing features that are interesting. --- Wait, can the Redway protocol really handle losing half of the nodes? That needs to be verified before we can believe it. --- Haha, finally we're not just comparing TPS; we should discuss how long data stays alive—that's the real topic. WAL is definitely filling in some gaps. --- So basically, it's about making data survive. Filecoin is too slow, and some DA schemes are too fragile. Finding this balance is very difficult—does Walrus have a chance? --- I have a feeling that storage has been neglected for too long. Everyone wants speed, but no one considers that if it's too fast, data might be lost.
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