Recently, while researching the Web3 infrastructure ecosystem, I spent quite some time looking into decentralized storage. The deeper I delved, the more I realized that there is a project in this space with a particularly interesting approach — it completely rethinks the data security problem from a different perspective.



First, let's talk about the current situation. What are we long accustomed to? Centralized cloud services like Alibaba Cloud, AWS, Tencent Cloud. Stable performance and smooth experience — these advantages are undeniable. But the problem is — fundamentally, it relies on trusting a single server or platform. Once that platform fails or data is tampered with, users have no real control over their data. This is the inherent shortcoming of the centralized model.

In contrast, these decentralized storage projects take a completely different path. The core logic is quite straightforward: split, encode, and then disperse storage of data. What are the benefits of doing this? First, it eliminates single point of failure risks; second, data becomes verifiable and has long-term availability guarantees.

For the Web3 ecosystem, this is extremely critical. Imagine NFT images and metadata, asset data in blockchain games, or even AI training data — without a reliable decentralized storage backing, these things are essentially in a state of "name only," with no real substance. Without a secure storage layer, all applications built on top are just castles in the air.

From a technical architecture perspective, these projects are not simply doing "decentralized cloud storage." The real problem they aim to solve is: how can off-chain data be stored efficiently, securely, and sustainably? This may sound like a basic issue, but within the entire Web3 ecosystem, it is seriously underestimated.

Looking at it from another angle, once the upper-layer applications truly explode — the prosperity of the NFT market, the growth of blockchain games, the integration of AI and blockchain — the demand for underlying storage will grow exponentially. That’s why I am optimistic about these infrastructure projects. They are more like the utilities of an ecosystem — water, electricity, and gas — rather than short-term speculative targets. In the long run, they are the truly profitable tracks.
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