The company has signed a basic agreement with DiscoverFeed to explore new business opportunities built around distributed data infrastructure. The relationship is not entirely new. DiscoverFeed is already connected through a capital relationship inherited after the merger with Minkabu Web3 Wallet in September 2025. This agreement now pushes that collaboration into a more structured business partnership.
At the center of the plan is DiscoverFeed’s distributed data technology, including IPFS and its D-DMC concept. The goal is to move beyond simple data storage and build services around managing, sharing, utilizing, and monetizing data.
The first target is the creator economy, yeah. With AI-generated content, plus high-resolution video, livestreams and digital assets keep expanding, creator’s kind of need more than just storage. They want tools for managing archives, re-editing content, sharing it with their fans, and also earning income from it. The company plans to handle the application layer, including creator management tools, fan engagement functions, wallets, payments, tipping, and reward distribution. Integration with DiscoverFeed’s fandom platform, MY Album, is also planned.
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The infrastructure supporting this effort includes DiscoverFeed’s first distributed data center in Saiki City, Oita Prefecture. Equipped with a 7,000TB storage system, operations are expected to begin in June 2026.
Once the creator-focused model is established, the same infrastructure will be expanded into financial services. Possible use cases, uh, cover regulatory record retention, audit trails, KYC and AML info sharing, digital securities, plus handling the shareholder records. The company also thinks there will be ongoing revenue stuff across storage, SaaS applications, payments, API integrations, and day to day operational support, which in turn helps its wider ‘AI x on-chain’ plan stay more solid.


