Every major development in the internet has the winner hidden in the infrastructure.
Looking back at the evolution of the internet, there is an unchanging underlying logic: the application layer creates prosperity, but the infrastructure is the ceiling.
Web3 cannot escape this rule either.
In the past few years, the industry's focus has almost never left blockchain throughput and application stories. But there has been a more fundamental question lingering—where should the data be stored?
On-chain storage? Too expensive.
Off-chain storage? Trust model collapses directly.
Centralized servers? That’s not Web3 anymore.
This dilemma is precisely the backdrop for the emergence of a new generation of data availability infrastructure. For example, some projects have very unique ideas—not traditional decentralized storage competitors, but solutions that truly address Web3’s most practical needs: handling massive data, supporting frequent calls, and ensuring long-term availability.
Through erasure coding and distributed verification mechanisms, these solutions can fragment, redundantly store, and make data recoverable, maintaining censorship resistance while bringing costs down to a level that applications can afford.
This is far more than just "cheaper storage."
The specific chain reactions are:
NFTs can now carry more than just image hash pointers—videos, 3D models, interactive content can be natively on-chain.
Blockchain games are completely freed from dependence on centralized servers, truly decentralized operation.
Decentralized social media and AI-native applications are turning from whitepapers into actionable plans for the first time.
From a deeper perspective, the role of these data infrastructure projects is similar to the combination of cloud storage and CDN in the Web2 era—but a decentralized, verifiable, trustless version.
The temperament of infrastructure projects is like this:
They won’t generate explosive short-term hype, but once locked into the ecosystem, they have almost no competitors.
They iterate slowly, but once they become standards, they are unbreakable.
If the previous phase of Web3 was a carnival of financial innovation, the next phase will inevitably be a true explosion of data and applications. And these foundational projects are precisely at the forefront of this wave.
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NotSatoshi
· 11h ago
Someone finally hit the nail on the head this time. Previously, when looking at those public chain narratives, it was all just covering the well, with no thought given to how to lay the foundation underneath. Data storage has long needed a breakthrough, and now it has finally arrived.
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ChainComedian
· 13h ago
Damn, finally someone has explained this clearly. Storage issues not solved, web3 is just a castle in the air
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Infrastructure is the most frustrating but also the most valuable. No one remembers the winners of the battle royale forever; only after the framework is built do you realize who made the profit
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Another track that no one paid attention to for five years and suddenly monopolized for ten years. I bet it’s the next wave
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The day NFT can truly store videos, then this entire industry will be considered decent
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Honestly, how many projects have died because of storage costs... If this kind of infrastructure is truly well-developed, it will be crazy
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The question is who can survive until the ecosystem locks them in; too many drop out along the way
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Slow to iterate but once it becomes a standard, it’s invincible? Sounds like describing tcp/ip... alright, I believe it
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Feels like describing the story of whether the next AWS will be born, kind of interesting
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Thinking calmly, without a truly reliable data layer, blockchain games and social platforms are all illusions
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FarmToRiches
· 01-14 14:49
Infrastructure is indeed easy to overlook, but once it secures a position, it becomes a long-term cash cow.
Speaking of storage costs, they are truly the bottleneck for Web3. Some projects are now starting to open up new ideas.
Wait, a truly decentralized chain game? Isn't that just bragging? Let me see if I can get it running.
The infrastructure track is calm and steady, but who laughs last will depend on ecosystem stickiness.
This logic is similar to when AWS took off years ago, but the Web3 version demands even higher standards.
The erasure coding technology is indeed solid, but the real challenge is how to break into new circles.
Indeed, NFT is no longer just about image link pointers, which is worth looking forward to.
I somewhat agree, but it still depends on how well the specific project is executed.
The underlying layer may be dull, but once it becomes a standard, it becomes a moat. That's for sure.
It seems the next wave of dividends won't be in the application layer anymore; we need to dig deeper.
Once the cost issues are solved, decentralized social media will truly have a chance.
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BlockchainArchaeologist
· 01-13 23:45
That's very true. The logic that infrastructure is the ultimate winner is indeed unavoidable in Web3.
The pain point in data storage has never been solved, which shows that this opportunity is real.
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ser_ngmi
· 01-13 23:43
Now I understand why those storage projects have been ignored for so long; it turns out everyone has been hyping up the application layer stories. Infrastructure is indeed slow and dull, but those who use it know.
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TokenomicsDetective
· 01-13 23:38
Ah, finally someone has explained this clearly: infrastructure is the real gold mine, and those developing applications are just working for others.
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ImpermanentLossFan
· 01-13 23:28
Infrastructure is indeed the winner in the shadows, but frankly, it still depends on who can survive until that day...
Every major development in the internet has the winner hidden in the infrastructure.
Looking back at the evolution of the internet, there is an unchanging underlying logic: the application layer creates prosperity, but the infrastructure is the ceiling.
Web3 cannot escape this rule either.
In the past few years, the industry's focus has almost never left blockchain throughput and application stories. But there has been a more fundamental question lingering—where should the data be stored?
On-chain storage? Too expensive.
Off-chain storage? Trust model collapses directly.
Centralized servers? That’s not Web3 anymore.
This dilemma is precisely the backdrop for the emergence of a new generation of data availability infrastructure. For example, some projects have very unique ideas—not traditional decentralized storage competitors, but solutions that truly address Web3’s most practical needs: handling massive data, supporting frequent calls, and ensuring long-term availability.
Through erasure coding and distributed verification mechanisms, these solutions can fragment, redundantly store, and make data recoverable, maintaining censorship resistance while bringing costs down to a level that applications can afford.
This is far more than just "cheaper storage."
The specific chain reactions are:
NFTs can now carry more than just image hash pointers—videos, 3D models, interactive content can be natively on-chain.
Blockchain games are completely freed from dependence on centralized servers, truly decentralized operation.
Decentralized social media and AI-native applications are turning from whitepapers into actionable plans for the first time.
From a deeper perspective, the role of these data infrastructure projects is similar to the combination of cloud storage and CDN in the Web2 era—but a decentralized, verifiable, trustless version.
The temperament of infrastructure projects is like this:
They won’t generate explosive short-term hype, but once locked into the ecosystem, they have almost no competitors.
They iterate slowly, but once they become standards, they are unbreakable.
If the previous phase of Web3 was a carnival of financial innovation, the next phase will inevitably be a true explosion of data and applications. And these foundational projects are precisely at the forefront of this wave.