dag.house aims to equip developers and end-users with the superpowers of content addressed and decentralized storage via IPFS and Filecoin while bringing the ease-of-use and performance that they might be used to. The goal is to grow the number of quality applications, tools, and services using IPFS and Filecoin for storage and increasing the volume of data stored on the networks (via more engaged and growing numbers of users), and help them be viewed as the default storage option for Web3 use cases.

Overview

As paradigms shift to Web3, there is a ton of whitespace for developers to build transformative products that can help fix the broken parts of using the Internet. In a world using decentralized storage, we’ll quickly see strong network effects as the public content-addressed data graph grows.

However, mass adoption cannot occur without meeting and outperforming on dimensions that developers and end-users consider table stakes with regards to storage - ease-of-use, reliability, performance, cost, transparency, flexibility, among other things. One illustration of this is in the NFT space: as long as we see NFTs minted referencing centralized URLs because decentralized storage is too confusing and slow to use, how can we expect deeper and more sophisticated applications and use cases to pop up?

The wave is coming and we want to build services and tools that ignite new developer ecosystems and end-user verticals by taking the current, ultimately temporary, friction out of web3 DX (you or your users don’t need to run your own infrastructure! you can store and retrieve data large or small! storage and retrieval is fast enough! etc.) all by taking advantage of the PL Stack and other Web3 superpowers (content addressing! decentralized identity! provable storage! user control over data!).

When building these services and tools, we need to strike a balance - designing interfaces and systems such that provide great experiences to our users today even in areas that are most important where there are current shortcomings of our stack, while positioning ourselves to take advantage of future upgrades (e.g., FVM, fast Filecoin storage/retrieval, retrieval markets).

As more users onboard into Web3, we also need to jumpstart new standards to truly achieve its vision. If we leave users even with the best intentions to their own devices, anti-patterns will still emerge (e.g. HTTP URLs in Solana NFTs).

Product theses

In the first 6 months of our products, we’ve learned a ton that we want to carry over into our evolution. Some examples include:

These learnings help give clarity on the right high-level direction to take our products:

NFT.Storage