The ‘decentralized storage’ war has continued to wage on over the years as more developments around this space came to life. Many teams like Filecoin, Storj, Sia, began building open source solutions in late 2016 and early 2017 after recognizing the latent opportunity.
Incidentally, in 2018, another decentralized storage space Arweave jumped onto the bandwagon. It launched a mainnet with the purpose of ‘permanent storage.’ Gradually, the competition between Arweave and Filecoin took the center stage.
Both Filecoin and Arweave enable decentralized, trust-minimized, censorship-resistant data storage for long periods. Either for archival purposes or real-time applications like website hosting. At first glance, both of these look pretty similar.
However, it’s important to note that Filecoin’s economic model mirrors that of centralized cloud providers: contract-based storage. Arweave, on the other hand, introduced an entirely new economic model to the market. One that was never possible before the advent of permission-less crypto networks: permanent storage.
Arweave charges a single fee for storing data indefinitely, whereas other protocols keep it as long as the users pay for it. It took the flagship protocol three years to go from 0 TB to 10 TB of stored data, but over the past six months, the amount of data stored grew by more than 40 TB.
Source: Tokenterminal
On the other hand, Filecoin was able to attract significant storage capacity as well. According to Messari’s, 30 March report, Filecoin’s committed storage capacity hiked steadily to over 16,000 PiB. This was ‘equivalent to approximately 65,000 copies of Wikipedia or 1,600 Netflix movie archives as of March 2022,’ the report added.
The network capacity comes from over 3,900
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