Having worked in the Web3 data layer for many years, I’ve noticed a phenomenon: the true competition among decentralized storage projects is not about who has more aggressive technical parameters, but whether they can do three things simultaneously—maintain decentralization, meet compliance requirements, and create business value. Most projects are either hijacked by the ideal of decentralization and abandon compliance; or they compromise wildly for monetization, ultimately losing their original technical intent. The result is a mess.
When Walrus appeared in my view, the background was very eye-catching: incubated by Mysten Labs and raised $140 million. But having substantial funding and a good background is nothing new. The key question is whether it can truly solve the industry's dilemma. I spent nearly a month dissecting the project from four angles: compliance architecture, business implementation, token design, and ecosystem layout. The conclusion is—this set of things exceeded my initial expectations.
It’s not just a storage tool. Walrus is building a complete data infrastructure centered on compliance, with technology as the backbone, integrating AI + RWA for real-world scenarios. This positioning is quite unique.
Next, I will use the first person, based on my practical experience in RWA compliance implementation and AI data storage, to elaborate on the entire project logic from four perspectives: compliance architecture design, business scenario implementation, token value verification, and ecosystem risk warning. All supported by real data and primary research, aiming to uncover the project’s core competitiveness while not avoiding potential compliance and business risks.
Let’s start by breaking down the compliance architecture. This is the core factor determining whether the project can break through, and it’s also the most common pitfall for most competitors.
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
20 Likes
Reward
20
6
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
CoffeeNFTrader
· 01-10 00:52
This is what I want to hear. Don't just boast about the fundraising scale; the real key is whether you can truly find a balance between compliance and decentralization.
View OriginalReply0
SignatureAnxiety
· 01-09 20:51
Breaking down Walrus in a month? This guy is serious, not just talking on paper.
View OriginalReply0
PanicSeller
· 01-09 20:51
The metaphor of "a pile of chicken feathers" is perfect—so true. Most projects are indeed torn apart live between ideals and monetization.
View OriginalReply0
CodeZeroBasis
· 01-09 20:50
The metaphor of "a pile of chicken feathers" is perfect, precisely describing the current state of most projects.
View OriginalReply0
OvertimeSquid
· 01-09 20:30
Disassembled over a month and exceeded expectations? Alright, I'll wait to see the chapter on compliance architecture. Those projects that were hyped up before were also quite impressive.
View OriginalReply0
AirdropHunter007
· 01-09 20:23
Compliance is the way to go. Projects that only focus on aggressive technology should have died long ago.
Having worked in the Web3 data layer for many years, I’ve noticed a phenomenon: the true competition among decentralized storage projects is not about who has more aggressive technical parameters, but whether they can do three things simultaneously—maintain decentralization, meet compliance requirements, and create business value. Most projects are either hijacked by the ideal of decentralization and abandon compliance; or they compromise wildly for monetization, ultimately losing their original technical intent. The result is a mess.
When Walrus appeared in my view, the background was very eye-catching: incubated by Mysten Labs and raised $140 million. But having substantial funding and a good background is nothing new. The key question is whether it can truly solve the industry's dilemma. I spent nearly a month dissecting the project from four angles: compliance architecture, business implementation, token design, and ecosystem layout. The conclusion is—this set of things exceeded my initial expectations.
It’s not just a storage tool. Walrus is building a complete data infrastructure centered on compliance, with technology as the backbone, integrating AI + RWA for real-world scenarios. This positioning is quite unique.
Next, I will use the first person, based on my practical experience in RWA compliance implementation and AI data storage, to elaborate on the entire project logic from four perspectives: compliance architecture design, business scenario implementation, token value verification, and ecosystem risk warning. All supported by real data and primary research, aiming to uncover the project’s core competitiveness while not avoiding potential compliance and business risks.
Let’s start by breaking down the compliance architecture. This is the core factor determining whether the project can break through, and it’s also the most common pitfall for most competitors.