The new blockchain compression layer aims to solve the industry's data storage issue, with traditional blockchains lacking the capacity to store data
Vanar Chain, a layer-1 blockchain network, has launched a new artificial intelligence-powered compression and data authentication layer designed to address the industry’s longstanding issue with onchain storage.
The new Neutron blockchain compression layer can achieve compression ratios of up to 500:1, capable of compressing a standard 25 megabyte file into a 50 kilobyte “Neutron Seed” storable on the blockchain ledger.
This solves the industry’s data storage issue, as traditional blockchains lack the capacity to store data, only to reference it. This design introduces potential single points of failure. Vanar's Neutron aims to solve this by enabling fully onchain, verifiable data storage.
Neutron is a “world first” which “handles both physical file compression and semantic compression, meaning it compresses not only the file itself but the meaning inside it,” Jawad Ashraf, CEO of Vanar Chain, told Cointelegraph:
"It finally delivers on one of blockchain's biggest promises: trustless, verifiable data, made truly accessible."For solutions like Nuklai’s Nexus, this is an important evolution, according to Matthijs de Vries, CEO of Nuklai, a blockchain layer 1 and collaborative data marketplace for AI development and large language models. This enables us to work directly with fully onchain, trustless data streams, minimizing external dependencies and unlocking much deeper, verifiable intelligence extraction."Neutron's capabilities are designed to fortify numerous blockchain segments, including adding memory to AI agents, adding verifiable file attachments for decentralized finance applications, uploading original documents to tokenized real-world assets, or adding immutable governance records to decentralized autonomous organizations. The Neutron launch follows several high-profile incidents highlighting risks in centralized infrastructure. On April 15, a major outage at Amazon Web Services (AWS) disrupted operations at major centralized exchanges, including Binance, KuCoin and MEXC.
Just days later, on April 24, over 20,000 CloneX NFTs created by RTFKT Studios disappeared due to what was believed to be a Cloudflare-related issue.
Nike was hit by a class-action lawsuit of $5 million on April 25 after a group of RTFKT users led by Jagdeep Cheema claimed that they suffered “significant damages” as a result of Nike touting its sneaker-themed NFTs to gain investors before shuttering the platform.
Onchain storage can address the mentioned vulnerabilities.
"What happened with Nike's NFTs and the AWS outage shows the threat: if the server fails, the asset disappears. But Neutron renders that impossibility," Ashraf said.