March 18, 2026 ChainGPT

Allium pushes 65TB+ institutional blockchain data onto Walrus for verifiable, programmable access

Allium pushes 65TB+ institutional blockchain data onto Walrus for verifiable, programmable access
Allium has pushed more than 65 TB of indexed, finance-ready blockchain data onto Walrus, the verifiable on‑chain data layer created by Mysten Labs. The datasets—covering Bitcoin, Ethereum, Sui, Arbitrum, Tron and XRP—arrived via a partnership that brings Allium’s institutional-grade records to Walrus’ decentralized distribution and verification stack. Why it matters - These aren’t raw blocks or logs: Allium delivers standardized, finance-ready datasets used by clients such as Visa, Stripe and Coinbase. - Hosting them on Walrus adds on-chain verifiability, built-in availability even during node failures, and programmable access controls—features aimed at institutional consumers and builders in on‑chain finance and AI. What the partners say Walrus Foundation managing executive Rebecca Simmonds framed the move as a trust play: “Data that underpins high-stakes financial decisions needs a foundation you can verify. Allium already serves some of the biggest names in fintech, and they're now delivering data through Walrus—making it verifiable, always available, and with programmable access built in.” Allium co‑founder and CEO Ethan Chan said the company is “experimenting with decentralized infrastructure as an additional distribution layer for institutional‑grade blockchain data.” How it works - Walrus provides on‑chain verification and resilience; the protocol says it has stored more than 450 TB of unencoded data less than a year after launch. - Allium’s datasets on Walrus leverage Seal, a decentralized secrets‑management service, enabling data to be encrypted and unlocked programmatically after purchase—without a centralized intermediary controlling access. - That combination lets data become a programmable asset that can be discovered, purchased and consumed autonomously by AI agents, quant funds, analytics platforms and other buyers. What’s next Both teams describe this as the start of a longer collaboration. Walrus and Allium plan to expand the catalog of institutional‑grade blockchain data available on the protocol in the coming weeks and months, broadening access to verifiable, production-ready on‑chain datasets for financial and AI applications. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news