Stop pretending, your Web3 project is actually just a 'decentralized' half-finished product. Everyone knows that no matter how flawless the contract is written, the front-end (UI) still largely relies on servers like Vercel or AWS; this means that as long as centralized cloud vendors want to pull the plug, even if you hold the private key, you can only stare at a 404 page helplessly. This fragile 'Web2.5' architecture is simply a ticking time bomb in the industry. Walrus (WAL) is launching Walrus Sites this time, which is essentially giving all developers a 'pair of scissors' to completely cut off dependence on traditional servers. It is not just about storing data, but rather turning the storage layer into a 'serverless' runtime environment. Thanks to an efficient coding mechanism, the browser can directly fetch and render HTML and JS files from the decentralized network, allowing your application to float in the network like a ghost, with no single point of failure that can be attacked or shut down. When both the front end and back end of an application achieve true 'on-chain immortality', we can dare to say that what we are building is a censorship-resistant Web3, rather than a toy that dresses up Amazon Cloud. #walrus $WAL
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