Honestly, the vast majority of people don't really care about what a "storage protocol" is.
What they truly care about is one question: will my stuff suddenly disappear?
NFT avatars become inaccessible, game save data inexplicably resets, content I posted gets taken down—these things happen repeatedly. Every time there's a mishap, it sharply reminds users: this stuff doesn't really belong to me. Once this sense of disconnection forms, it's very hard to eliminate.
So, the true significance of Walrus isn't about helping ordinary people understand technical details. Quite the opposite, it's about making it so they don't need to understand those complex things at all.
When your data can exist stably, not stuck in a single platform's limited space, and isn't easily altered at will, trust naturally builds up. Once this trust takes root, short-term marketing narratives can't shake it.
This is the true source of long-term value.
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GigaBrainAnon
· 7h ago
Exactly right, no one really cares about the technical details, they just want peace of mind.
The NFT crash really hurt deeply; now everything has to be questioned with "Is this really mine?"
By the way, if Walrus truly stabilizes, it would indeed be a turning point.
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GmGmNoGn
· 01-07 18:20
Basically, it's about making users sleep soundly without constantly worrying that their data might be evaporated someday.
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PonziDetector
· 01-06 20:51
Damn, it's that old cliché "trust theory" again. Sounds nice, but can Walrus really guarantee that data will never disappear? I think we still have to wait for the day when a real crash happens to verify it. No matter how loud they boast now, it's all pointless.
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NestedFox
· 01-06 20:48
Basically, it's a trust issue. Who cares about the technical details?
It was only when my account was frozen that I realized what true ownership means. I was truly desperate.
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ForumMiningMaster
· 01-06 20:38
Basically, it’s about making users truly feel at ease, and not fool them with technical jargon.
Honestly, the vast majority of people don't really care about what a "storage protocol" is.
What they truly care about is one question: will my stuff suddenly disappear?
NFT avatars become inaccessible, game save data inexplicably resets, content I posted gets taken down—these things happen repeatedly. Every time there's a mishap, it sharply reminds users: this stuff doesn't really belong to me. Once this sense of disconnection forms, it's very hard to eliminate.
So, the true significance of Walrus isn't about helping ordinary people understand technical details. Quite the opposite, it's about making it so they don't need to understand those complex things at all.
When your data can exist stably, not stuck in a single platform's limited space, and isn't easily altered at will, trust naturally builds up. Once this trust takes root, short-term marketing narratives can't shake it.
This is the true source of long-term value.