Decentralized computing is emerging as a more contested Web3 battleground, with projects trying to move storage, computation and networking off centralized cloud platforms rather than leaving key app layers on AWS, Google Cloud or Azure.
That push is driven by censorship risk, single points of failure and data-sovereignty concerns: even decentralized protocols can lose access when governments or providers pressure the cloud hosts running their frontends and APIs.
Projects still face two immediate hurdles—matching commercial-cloud performance on latency, uptime and tooling, while also making token rewards, fee sharing and staking economics attractive enough for both developers and node operators.
Internet Computer is cited as one of the most ambitious contenders, but its longer-term adoption case still hinges on whether canister-based apps prove easier or cheaper for enterprises and startups in live production use.
The broader test for the sector is whether cryptographic verification, DePIN hardware networks and wider node distribution can narrow the cost and usability gap enough to make decentralized cloud a default choice over the next decade.