The Walrus project is focused on one of the most ignored problems in Web3: data storage. Many people think Web3 is already fully decentralized, but the truth is different. While blockchains handle transactions, most Web3 apps still store images, files, and user content on centralized servers. This creates risk. When storage fails, the app fails. This is exactly the gap Walrus Protocol is trying to fix.

Walrus Protocol is built as a decentralized storage layer made specifically for Web3 applications. Instead of relying on one company or server, data is distributed across a network. This helps reduce downtime, censorship, and sudden data loss. If one part of the network goes offline, the rest continues to serve the data.

This is very important for real Web3 use cases. NFT projects need permanent images and metadata. DeFi platforms depend on always-available data. Creators and communities want their content to stay online without fear of removal. Walrus supports all of these by making data availability stronger and more reliable.

Another strong point of the Walrus project is long-term thinking. Web3 is still early, and projects that survive will be the ones with strong infrastructure. Centralized storage may work today, but it creates problems as apps grow. Walrus offers a decentralized alternative that fits Web3 values like openness and resilience.

Users may not see Walrus directly, but they feel the result when apps work smoothly. Good infrastructure works quietly in the background. By improving the storage layer, Walrus helps Web3 feel more stable and trustworthy.

@Walrus 🦭/acc $WAL #Walrus #ADPDataDisappoints

Do you think projects like Walrus are necessary for Web3 to become truly decentralized and reliable?