Recently, I came across an interesting migration case — a leading data platform moved 300TB of blockchain data to a distributed storage network. This is worth discussing.
In the past, I was always worried because on-chain historical data relied heavily on centralized nodes, and the risk of data loss or tampering always existed. Now, with a different approach, data is sliced and dispersed across global nodes. Even if some nodes fail, it can be reconstructed through coding mechanisms. This fault-tolerant design truly alleviates concerns.
I personally experienced using this system through the Sui wallet; uploading small files was very smooth — just a few steps, and the cost is stably priced in USD, so there's no need to constantly watch crypto price fluctuations. This is quite friendly for ordinary users.
In my view, such underlying support is especially helpful for AI applications and identity verification projects. For example, after a privacy protocol shifted from IPFS to a distributed storage system, user credentials were migrated over, and with privacy rules in place, data controllability greatly improved. It feels like moving daily records from big cloud providers into your own hands — the sense of security is completely different.
Looking ahead to 2026, these small migrations are expected to become more frequent, and the path toward data autonomy in Web3 will gradually be realized.
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BanklessAtHeart
· 7h ago
300TB moving, this is what true decentralization should be doing
Using a dollar-stable fee design is much better than those coins whose prices are like roller coasters
The IPFS system is finally getting an upgrade, it was about time to change it
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NeonCollector
· 7h ago
I’ve looked into the 300TB migration, and distributed storage is truly satisfying. No more fear of centralized systems.
I’ve experienced using the Sui wallet—it's really smooth, and the stable pricing is incredibly friendly to us.
Having the data in your own hands feels completely different. This is what true Web3 should look like.
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DAOdreamer
· 7h ago
Moving 300TB? Easier said than done. The real key is the fault tolerance mechanism. What I fear most is a node suddenly going offline and crashing the entire system.
But to be honest, the IPFS system has long been outdated. Finally, someone is taking it seriously.
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LiquidityWizard
· 8h ago
300TB, this migration project must be quite complex... But on the other hand, it's definitely better than being trapped when a centralized server runs away.
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DeFi_Dad_Jokes
· 8h ago
The 300TB move shows that the blockchain community is finally starting to take data security seriously, isn't it?
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zkProofInThePudding
· 8h ago
300TB of data isn't as complicated to handle as I imagined. The encoding mechanism is truly excellent.
Recently, I came across an interesting migration case — a leading data platform moved 300TB of blockchain data to a distributed storage network. This is worth discussing.
In the past, I was always worried because on-chain historical data relied heavily on centralized nodes, and the risk of data loss or tampering always existed. Now, with a different approach, data is sliced and dispersed across global nodes. Even if some nodes fail, it can be reconstructed through coding mechanisms. This fault-tolerant design truly alleviates concerns.
I personally experienced using this system through the Sui wallet; uploading small files was very smooth — just a few steps, and the cost is stably priced in USD, so there's no need to constantly watch crypto price fluctuations. This is quite friendly for ordinary users.
In my view, such underlying support is especially helpful for AI applications and identity verification projects. For example, after a privacy protocol shifted from IPFS to a distributed storage system, user credentials were migrated over, and with privacy rules in place, data controllability greatly improved. It feels like moving daily records from big cloud providers into your own hands — the sense of security is completely different.
Looking ahead to 2026, these small migrations are expected to become more frequent, and the path toward data autonomy in Web3 will gradually be realized.