Decentralized storage has been around for over ten years since the emergence of IPFS. During this period, countless projects have sprung up, but only a few have achieved scale and widespread adoption.
Filecoin, backed by Protocol Labs and supported by a vast miner ecosystem, has secured the top position. Arweave has attracted a large number of loyal users with its flagship permanent storage solution. As for Walrus, which recently exploded in the Sui ecosystem, its selling points are clear—efficient erasure coding combined with low costs.
Having long experimented with various storage solutions myself, I took the time to analyze the underlying technologies, cost models, and practical experiences of these three projects. Especially in the increasingly popular application scenario of AI data storage, I wanted to see which one performs better.
Let's start with the technical architecture. The design philosophies of these three protocols are quite different. Filecoin is essentially a storage market—miners provide hard drive capacity, users negotiate deals through contracts, and the protocol uses PoRep and PoSt proof mechanisms to ensure miners are actually storing the data. This design is very rigorous but also complex. You need to negotiate with miners, decide on the number of replicas, and manage the entire deal lifecycle.
Arweave takes a completely different approach. Users pay once for permanent storage, with data distributed across the network nodes via the Blockweave architecture, relying on the PoA mechanism to ensure nodes honestly store historical data.
Walrus's approach is more interesting—it combines best practices from traditional distributed storage systems with blockchain technology. It mainly uses Sui as...
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ShibaSunglasses
· 5h ago
Walrus really has some potential; the low-cost aspect hits my pain point.
Filecoin's deal mechanism is too complicated; negotiating prices feels like dating.
AI data storage really needs to be looked into; whoever offers the cheapest wins.
Arweave's permanent storage sounds great, but in practice, it still depends on the actual costs.
The recent moves in the Sui ecosystem have definitely gained momentum; how long Walrus can last remains to be seen.
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NFTHoarder
· 19h ago
It's been over ten years, and only these three can compete, which shows that the ceiling of this track is indeed high. Filecoin is too complicated, honestly, the mining setup is a nightmare.
Arweave's permanent storage sounds great, but can the price be affordable?
Will Walrus be the game-changer this time?
Is AI data storage really the next big trend?
The Sui ecosystem has been so active lately, I'm a bit worried about being cut off, but Walrus's low-cost advantage is indeed tempting.
Protocol Labs definitely knows how to do it, but breaking the monopoly pattern is also very difficult.
Wait, if you had to choose, how would you decide?
How is Arweave's user stickiness? Permanent storage sounds appealing, but is it really reliable?
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MEVHunterLucky
· 19h ago
Hmm... I need to take a good look at Walrus. The complicated bargaining process of Filecoin is really impressive, but using it is exhausting.
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TokenDustCollector
· 19h ago
After more than ten years, no truly killer app has emerged, which really says a lot.
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AirdropHustler
· 19h ago
Ten years later, FIL still dominates the market. Arweave has survived to this day through permanent storage. Walrus is considered a new story in the Sui ecosystem, and it's all about affordability.
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tokenomics_truther
· 19h ago
Wow, is Walrus really that good? With the Filecoin miner ecosystem so mature, why should I switch?
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BoredWatcher
· 19h ago
Filecoin's complexity is truly incredible, and you still have to haggle with miners. So annoying.
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LayerZeroHero
· 19h ago
Storing the triangle world, Filecoin is still that expensive and complex big brother
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The promise of Arweave's permanent storage sounds great, but who’s responsible if the project team runs away
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Walrus's low-cost approach is real, but I'm just worried it might become the next "hot trend project"
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After more than ten years, only these three can compete, indicating that this track is quite competitive
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In AI data storage, cost is the life and death line. Don’t talk to me about decentralization ideals
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Protocol Labs has a very strong capital background; Filecoin can win just by lying down
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Walrus does a good job with erasure coding, but the ecosystem still relies on Sui
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Permanent storage sounds perfect, but in practice, there are many cases where data can't be found
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If I really had to choose among these three, it depends on what the actual project pain points are
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Miner bargaining is really testing people's patience, Filecoin
Decentralized storage has been around for over ten years since the emergence of IPFS. During this period, countless projects have sprung up, but only a few have achieved scale and widespread adoption.
Filecoin, backed by Protocol Labs and supported by a vast miner ecosystem, has secured the top position. Arweave has attracted a large number of loyal users with its flagship permanent storage solution. As for Walrus, which recently exploded in the Sui ecosystem, its selling points are clear—efficient erasure coding combined with low costs.
Having long experimented with various storage solutions myself, I took the time to analyze the underlying technologies, cost models, and practical experiences of these three projects. Especially in the increasingly popular application scenario of AI data storage, I wanted to see which one performs better.
Let's start with the technical architecture. The design philosophies of these three protocols are quite different. Filecoin is essentially a storage market—miners provide hard drive capacity, users negotiate deals through contracts, and the protocol uses PoRep and PoSt proof mechanisms to ensure miners are actually storing the data. This design is very rigorous but also complex. You need to negotiate with miners, decide on the number of replicas, and manage the entire deal lifecycle.
Arweave takes a completely different approach. Users pay once for permanent storage, with data distributed across the network nodes via the Blockweave architecture, relying on the PoA mechanism to ensure nodes honestly store historical data.
Walrus's approach is more interesting—it combines best practices from traditional distributed storage systems with blockchain technology. It mainly uses Sui as...