I've always felt that these decentralized storage protocols are seriously underestimated. I wonder what everyone thinks.
When it comes to distributed storage, many people's impressions are still stuck in the old ways. But innovation in this field has already gone beyond imagination.
Taking a recently active storage protocol as an example, its logic is actually quite straightforward—it's about ensuring your data is safe, low-cost, and truly under your control. How does it do that?
**The core mechanism is actually not complicated:**
Imagine you upload a health data file (like a sleep report). The first step the system takes is to encrypt it, then use erasure coding techniques (like Reed-Solomon encoding) to "shard" the file into many small data blocks. The clever part is that even if 2/3 of the nodes lose their data, the remaining fragments can still fully restore the original file. Compared to traditional solutions, this not only enhances security but also reduces storage costs.
These encrypted data blocks are distributed across independent storage nodes worldwide. The key metadata and index information are stored on a public blockchain (like Sui), where you can set access rules via smart contracts, enabling data programmability.
In simple terms, this is a truly global distributed "vault" network. Secure, transparent, and cost-effective. This design concept has great potential in the Web3 space, but it hasn't received as much attention as it deserves.
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BearMarketSurvivor
· 01-11 12:20
Erasure coding is indeed impressive, but its real implementation depends on adoption rate. Otherwise, no matter how advanced the technology is, it’s all for nothing.
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gm_or_ngmi
· 01-10 07:37
The erasure coding system is indeed impressive, but how many projects that actually go on the chain are still alive this year?
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StakoorNeverSleeps
· 01-08 15:46
The erasure coding system is indeed excellent, but there are very few projects that can actually be used.
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SolidityStruggler
· 01-08 15:46
To be honest, the erasure coding system is indeed excellent, but ordinary people simply wouldn't use it.
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GasGuzzler
· 01-08 15:45
Erasure coding is indeed impressive, but how many can actually be used in practice? Most are probably still at the PPT stage.
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AirdropHunter007
· 01-08 15:38
Erasure coding is indeed impressive, but how many projects can actually utilize it?
I've always felt that these decentralized storage protocols are seriously underestimated. I wonder what everyone thinks.
When it comes to distributed storage, many people's impressions are still stuck in the old ways. But innovation in this field has already gone beyond imagination.
Taking a recently active storage protocol as an example, its logic is actually quite straightforward—it's about ensuring your data is safe, low-cost, and truly under your control. How does it do that?
**The core mechanism is actually not complicated:**
Imagine you upload a health data file (like a sleep report). The first step the system takes is to encrypt it, then use erasure coding techniques (like Reed-Solomon encoding) to "shard" the file into many small data blocks. The clever part is that even if 2/3 of the nodes lose their data, the remaining fragments can still fully restore the original file. Compared to traditional solutions, this not only enhances security but also reduces storage costs.
These encrypted data blocks are distributed across independent storage nodes worldwide. The key metadata and index information are stored on a public blockchain (like Sui), where you can set access rules via smart contracts, enabling data programmability.
In simple terms, this is a truly global distributed "vault" network. Secure, transparent, and cost-effective. This design concept has great potential in the Web3 space, but it hasn't received as much attention as it deserves.