In the world of Web3, on-chain data has long been 'locked' in a triple bind: scattered across multi-chain islands and 'unretrievable', lying in nodes and 'unable to be realized', hidden behind privacy concerns and 'too scared to use'. Most data tools only act as 'movers' but cannot unlock these binds. The emergence of Chainbase is not just about upgrading tools but directly reconstructing the 'rules of data usage' - allowing data to flow across chains, turn into revenue, and provide secure empowerment, achieving a transformation from 'passive storage' to 'active value creation'. This is the core logic that enables it to stand out in the field.

1. Breaking the 'island lock': Allowing multi-chain data to be 'retrievable and usable', resolving the deadlock of 'unretrievable'.

The first lock on Web3 data is 'multi-chain fragmentation + format barriers'. Ethereum's transaction logs, Solana's account data, and Sui's Move object are all hidden in the nodes of different chains, requiring developers to interface with three sets of tools to gather the data; even more troublesome is that much of this data is in formats like hashes and bytecode that AI models and enterprise systems cannot 'understand'. Chainbase's solution is to create a 'universal key' for data.

Its newly upgraded Hyperdata Network features a 'high-speed parsing module' specifically for the Solana chain - previously, querying Solana's historical transaction data took 5 seconds, but now, through 'edge node pre-indexing + on-chain light verification', the delay has been reduced to 300ms, and it can automatically extract 12 features such as 'account activity and token circulation paths', exporting them directly to Excel or in CSV format that AI can read. A quant team used this for cross-chain arbitrage, which used to take 2 hours to consolidate multi-chain data, but now can generate a strategy in just 5 minutes, improving the arbitrage opportunity capture rate by 70%.

To address the 'format gap' of heterogeneous chains, it has also launched a 'cross-chain data translator': capable of converting Sui chain's Move object data into a format compatible with Ethereum's ERC-20. After integration by a cross-chain DEX, assets staked on the Sui chain can be used for collateral lending directly on the Ethereum chain, tripling the cross-chain asset utilization rate and completely breaking down the 'data wall between chains'.

2. Breaking the 'value lock': Turning data into a 'source of revenue' to resolve the 'inability to realize' dilemma.

Being able to extract data is just the first step; being able to realize its value is the key to breaking the second lock. In the past, users' on-chain behavioral data (such as NFT collection records and DeFi trading habits) were taken by platforms for free to conduct analysis and advertise, leaving users with no revenue share. Chainbase directly reconstructs the rules: the revenue from the data should belong to its creator.

It has added a 'per-call revenue share' model to the 'data asset market': when users authorize their data, they can set '10% revenue for each call'. A regular user authorized their six months of DeFi investment data to a wealth management platform, which used this data to optimize the investment strategy, calling it 2000 times a month, allowing the user to earn 1200C just from revenue sharing; a certain e-commerce blockchain project secured users' on-chain consumption data and authorized brands for precise marketing, allowing users to earn 0.5C for each compliant ad recommended to them, with average monthly earnings exceeding $2000C.

Supporting all of this is the stable ecosystem of the C token. Currently, C has been launched on 18 major exchanges including Binance and Coinbase, with a 24-hour depth of $25 million for the C/USDT trading pair on Binance. In the early Q4 of 2025, during market fluctuations, the price only retracted by 12%, far below the industry average of 40%. In terms of token distribution, 72% of the total supply of 1 billion tokens is directed towards the ecosystem (48% for developer incentives, 15% for data creator revenue sharing, 9% for user airdrops), with only 8% allocated to the team, locked for 4 years. A certain sovereign fund from Southeast Asia recently added $25 million to its holdings, raising the institutional ownership ratio to 51%, providing a stable 'valuation and flow medium' for data revenue.

3. Breaking the 'security lock': Enabling sensitive data to be 'used and enjoyed', eliminating the bottleneck of 'not daring to use'.

The third lock on data is the 'conflict between privacy and usage' - fearing leakage of data, yet hiding it wastes value. Especially in sensitive fields such as finance, healthcare, and agriculture, this concern leaves many high-quality data 'sleeping' on the chain. Chainbase uses 'privacy computing + compliance certification' to make data 'available but invisible'.

In the agricultural scenario, a rice exporter from Southeast Asia uses Chainbase to encrypt and chain the 'soil data, fertilization records, and testing reports' from the planting process. Buyers wanting to verify the rice quality do not need to look at the raw data, but can simply confirm through ZK proof that 'the data meets organic standards'; insurance companies use this encrypted data for traceability insurance, reducing premiums by 20% and avoiding concerns about data theft by competitors.

In the financial scenario, a cross-border payment platform uses Chainbase's 'dynamic encryption gateway' to store user identity information and transaction data separately - identity information is stored in a hardware security module (HSM), while transaction data is protected by attribute-based encryption (ABE), which can only be decrypted and viewed by banks that have completed KYC. After going live, the platform's compliance costs were reduced by 40%, user privacy complaints dropped to zero, and it passed the financial certification of Singapore's MAS.

Conclusion: Unlocking the data lock to open a new situation in Web3.

The value of Chainbase has never been about being a 'faster data tool', but about being a 'breaker of data locks' - it dismantled the walls of multi-chains, allowing data to be retrievable; changed the rules of distribution, allowing data to be monetized; and protected the bottom line of privacy, allowing data to be usable. This logic not only addresses the long-standing pain points of Web3 but also precisely targets the new trends of 'data assetization' and 'blockchain empowering the real economy'.

With the launch of Hyperdata Network 2.0 by the end of 2025, it will also introduce a 'cross-chain data compliance map' - automatically matching privacy regulations from different regions (such as EU GDPR, US CCPA). Data authorized in the EU will automatically trigger stricter encryption rules. When data is completely freed from the binds of 'unretrievable, unable to realize, and too scared to use', Web3 can transform from a 'niche game' into a 'mainstream value network', and Chainbase is the 'key to this transformation'.