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In 48 BC, Caesar's army set fire to the Library of Alexandria. The place that held the essence of human civilization was instantly reduced to ashes. This catastrophe taught us a lesson: entrusting knowledge to a single-point system is like leaving history to chance.
Over two thousand years have passed, countless technological iterations have occurred, yet humanity has stumbled twice in the same place.
In the Web2 era, data was locked in the servers of a few internet giants. You could use it, but never own it. When company policies change, services shut down, or accounts are frozen—your data is like a hard drive unplugged from power, instantly disconnected. The fate of the data is entirely controlled by centralized institutions.
Web3 claims to change all this, but the reality is quite harsh: blockchain is sufficiently decentralized, yet data storage remains a bottleneck. Most project NFTs are just links that could become invalid at any time. Game assets, AI training sets, on-chain content—they all face the same dilemma.
There is a protocol called Walrus, which is trying to break this deadlock. It’s not naive enough to pile all data onto the blockchain, but instead takes a more pragmatic approach: focusing on building an efficient, secure, and programmable distributed storage system.
Its approach is clever—splitting files into fragments and dispersing them across multiple nodes in the network through encoding techniques. Data no longer depends on a single point of survival. More importantly, through smart contracts, these "cold, hard data" have gained the ability to be composable, callable, and interactive for the first time.
How significant is this? Imagine:
NFTs are finally no longer just links that could 404 at any moment, but real, tangible digital assets.
Training data for AI models, on-chain media libraries, characters and equipment in game worlds—all can be guaranteed long-term.
Storage costs are no longer just "expenses," but part of the entire Web3 economy involving participation, distribution, and incentives.
In this system, the role of tokens is greatly expanded—not only paying for storage but also incentivizing network participants, maintaining system security, and driving community governance. Data is no longer just stored coldly; it is integrated into a complete economy and trust system.
From the burned library to the frequently crashing cloud, humanity has paid enough for "centralized storage." Perhaps this time, we truly understand a principle: the most important things can never be stored in just one place.