The real issue with storage protocols often doesn't lie in the technology itself but in flaws in economic design.



Many projects operate like this: users pay a one-time fee, and that's it, while miners/nodes have to bear ongoing bandwidth costs and online obligations. The most dangerous part of this mismatch is—cash flow mismatch, where node income and costs can't be aligned. What happens as a result? Network instability, nodes running away, and the entire mechanism collapsing.

Walrus's approach is completely opposite: making storage services into "long-term contracts paid over time." The key difference is—payment cycles and node income cycles are bound together, aligning on the same timeline. This way, nodes don't have to rely on short-term subsidies to sustain themselves but can earn stable income through long-term performance. It sounds simple, but this is precisely the key to turning distributed storage from a "cost black hole" into a "sustainable infrastructure."

So, looking at the WAL token from a different perspective—it should be seen as a tool for service settlement, not just a speculative asset. As more applications treat data as a productive resource, a system that integrates costs, performance commitments, and incentive mechanisms is most likely to elevate storage from a cost item to a truly valuable infrastructure business.
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