These days, discussions about Web3 storage are often driven by sentimentality, but what truly convinces enterprise applications to get involved is always the most brutal question—money.
Currently, decentralized storage solutions on the market each have their flaws. Some adopt a "one-time payment for permanent storage" model, betting on future cost reductions through complex endowment mechanisms. However, for business data that requires frequent iterations, the cost pressure is just too high. Another approach is to back up the entire network with full replicas, ensuring security with an alarmingly high redundancy—equivalent to paying for a hundred copies of a single image. When you do the math, no one can accept that.
What’s truly interesting are the "day-to-day" solutions. They don’t make grandiose promises; instead, they make smart engineering choices—using algorithms like Red Stuff, they only need to slice files and store small amounts of redundancy across network nodes, rather than storing entire copies repeatedly. This approach effectively distributes risk across the network, ensuring data is never lost while also bringing the unit storage cost close to that of AWS S3.
This engineering mindset, which maximizes "cost-performance ratio," may seem less grand than "permanent storage," but it’s actually the real ticket to mass adoption. Because only when on-chain storage costs become negligible will enterprises truly dare to migrate their operations onto the chain, rather than just staying in the realm of PPT presentations.
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MetaverseLandlady
· 5h ago
Exactly right, that's the point. Constantly hyping how awesome Web3 is, but it's all stuck on costs.
Cost-effectiveness is the real king; who would play with the endowment approach? It's basically gambling with your life.
Red Stuff's方案 is indeed tough; only when redundancy is cut down do companies dare to get on board.
Those projects full of passion should have already looked at this pragmatic approach.
No hype, no blackening; storage that can match S3 prices is the real necessity, everything else is just虚的
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MetaverseLandlord
· 5h ago
Basically, it's about doing the math. All those grandiose plans that sound amazing ultimately fall short when it comes to costs. It's quite interesting.
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ForkItAllDay
· 5h ago
That's so true. Projects that promote permanent storage are just pie in the sky. Whether they can truly survive depends on whether the ledger can be accurately accounted for.
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down_only_larry
· 5h ago
It's another bunch of sentimental stories; basically, they just can't sell it.
Red Stuff is indeed frugal, but at least it dares to face the devil called cost, which is much more reliable than those who just make big promises.
These days, discussions about Web3 storage are often driven by sentimentality, but what truly convinces enterprise applications to get involved is always the most brutal question—money.
Currently, decentralized storage solutions on the market each have their flaws. Some adopt a "one-time payment for permanent storage" model, betting on future cost reductions through complex endowment mechanisms. However, for business data that requires frequent iterations, the cost pressure is just too high. Another approach is to back up the entire network with full replicas, ensuring security with an alarmingly high redundancy—equivalent to paying for a hundred copies of a single image. When you do the math, no one can accept that.
What’s truly interesting are the "day-to-day" solutions. They don’t make grandiose promises; instead, they make smart engineering choices—using algorithms like Red Stuff, they only need to slice files and store small amounts of redundancy across network nodes, rather than storing entire copies repeatedly. This approach effectively distributes risk across the network, ensuring data is never lost while also bringing the unit storage cost close to that of AWS S3.
This engineering mindset, which maximizes "cost-performance ratio," may seem less grand than "permanent storage," but it’s actually the real ticket to mass adoption. Because only when on-chain storage costs become negligible will enterprises truly dare to migrate their operations onto the chain, rather than just staying in the realm of PPT presentations.