Currently, the competition in the AI field is fierce, and computing power is no longer the bottleneck. The real bottleneck is high-quality, compliant data supply. The trusted data trading ecosystem built by Walrus revitalizes data owners' assets while enabling developers to access verified clean data—this is of great significance for the technological progress of the entire industry. As a market trading medium, the WAL token's value is deeply tied to the development path of the AI industry. In the long term, such infrastructure tokens typically appreciate in value as the application ecosystem prospers, making it worth paying attention to the trends in this track.
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GreenCandleCollector
· 01-15 11:30
Data is the new oil, and Walrus really understands this point. Computing power has reached its limit, now it's all about who can carve up the data cake well.
The logic of WAL is indeed valid, but the prerequisite is that the ecosystem must really get off the ground, right? Otherwise, it's all just storytelling.
The compliance data trading ecosystem sounds easy to talk about, but hard to implement... it depends on how the follow-up is promoted.
The issue of data rights confirmation has not been resolved for so long, how does Walrus handle this? I'm a bit curious.
In the long run, I agree with the logic of infrastructure tokens, but the problem is waiting until someone actually uses them... right now, it's mostly at the conceptual stage.
Sigh, forget it, just keep an eye on it, and wait for new updates. Anyway, AI will definitely need a few more years of development.
Data circulation is indeed a pain point, but how is the trust mechanism established? Is on-chain verification enough?
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0xSunnyDay
· 01-14 05:16
Data is the new oil. Walrus has now identified the pain point, but whether WAL can truly take off depends on whether the ecosystem can get running.
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MysteryBoxAddict
· 01-13 15:39
Data is indeed the new bottleneck, but can Walrus actually be implemented? Feels like just another pie-in-the-sky plan.
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Compliance data trading sounds good, but who will guarantee data quality? It still depends on actual application.
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I'm a bit skeptical about the logic of binding WAL to AI development paths... Infrastructure tokens have always been a gamble on the future.
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Another "worth paying attention to in the long term"... I'm a bit tired of hearing that. Let's wait and see how the mainnet performs first.
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Once such an ecosystem is launched, will data providers get cut like leeks? That's the key issue.
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Trustworthy trading sounds like nonsense... The real question is whether there are actual application parties willing to take over.
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Hmm... I agree that computing power isn't a bottleneck, but what about data monopoly issues? Can this plan really break through?
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I don't really trust the promises of new projects; there are too many lessons from history.
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GweiWatcher
· 01-13 08:39
Data is the new oil field, and this logic makes sense. The Walrus system indeed hits the pain point, but how high WAL can go depends on the progress of ecosystem implementation. Having only the concept makes it easy to fail.
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RugPullAlertBot
· 01-12 21:55
Data trading sounds good in theory, but I'm afraid it might just be an illusion. It depends on whether Walrus can truly understand and implement compliance.
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Degen4Breakfast
· 01-12 21:54
Data is the new oil, and the Walrus concept indeed addresses the pain points. WAL still has potential for long-term growth.
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Blockwatcher9000
· 01-12 21:49
Data is the new oil. The idea of Walrus truly addresses the pain points.
If WAL can really become a hub for data circulation, the long-term logic is solid.
The scarcity of compliant data still seems to be seriously underestimated.
As long as the track is right, it all depends on execution... There are too many projects being hyped now.
Infrastructure tokens are indeed a long-term worthwhile investment.
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LiquidationTherapist
· 01-12 21:45
Data is the new oil, and this has long been a consensus in the industry. Walrus's approach this time is indeed quite clever.
For WAL to truly take off, the key is whether the ecosystem can really be utilized.
Honestly, I've seen too many infrastructure tokens over the years, and most of them are now in the hands of investors.
Data compliance is a concern; once regulators tighten their grip, it immediately becomes fragile, which is a hidden worry.
However, if the data quality issues can be resolved, the prospects are indeed very promising.
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GateUser-9ad11037
· 01-12 21:43
Data is the new oil field, and this logic makes sense. But can Walrus really solve compliance issues? It still feels like there's a big question mark on the regulatory side.
Currently, the competition in the AI field is fierce, and computing power is no longer the bottleneck. The real bottleneck is high-quality, compliant data supply. The trusted data trading ecosystem built by Walrus revitalizes data owners' assets while enabling developers to access verified clean data—this is of great significance for the technological progress of the entire industry. As a market trading medium, the WAL token's value is deeply tied to the development path of the AI industry. In the long term, such infrastructure tokens typically appreciate in value as the application ecosystem prospers, making it worth paying attention to the trends in this track.