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In an era of information explosion, we often can't find the answers we want. Billions of data are generated, stored, and archived every day. Queries are quick, but there's always a sense that something is missing — like holding all the torn pages of a dictionary, every word is there, but you can't piece together an interesting story.
In the past, the approach was to push outward: produce more data, store it more securely, transmit it more rapidly. But few ask: can this data come alive on its own, weave itself into a network?
The problem may lie in our misunderstanding of data. For a long time, data has been seen as passive raw material, lying there waiting to be processed, related, and given meaning. Relationships are added afterward, context needs to be supplemented, and ultimately, humans are relied upon to interpret. But what about the natural world? The value of a neuron in the brain isn't in itself, but in how it connects to thousands of other neurons; the meaning of a tree in a forest depends on the surrounding soil, insects, birds, and microorganisms.
Meaning doesn't exist out of thin air — it grows from relationships, emerging in continuous, active connections.
The concept of "programmable data objects" in Walrus Protocol seems to open a new window into the data world. It not only enables data to relate to each other but, more importantly, through careful design, allows data objects to actively find each other, verify one another, and continuously generate new layers of meaning during the connection process. This subtly shifts the focus: from how to properly safeguard each fragment, to how to build an ecosystem where meaning can grow on its own.