Web3 Files Network did not walk in with fireworks or buzzwords. It showed up quietly, plugged itself into the spine of the internet, and started fixing the part most teams pretend is “good enough.” Filestorage is boring until it breaks. Centralized clouds fail loudly. IPFS works silently. The problem has never been the tech. The problem has been making it usable without a PhD and a terminal window. Frank Corsi saw that gap and treated it like an engineering problem, not a branding exercise.

Founded in Feb 2025 and officially live on Sept 15, Web3 Files Network sits on IPFS but feels familiar to anyone who has ever dragged a file into a folder and expected it to stay there. No CLI gymnastics. No Web3 hazing ritual. Just permanence, verification, and control that behaves like real infrastructure. Built in the United Kingdom by a lean 2–10 person team, the focus is uptime, speed, and reliability, not noise. This is storage that minds its business and does its job.

The company closed a $300K seed round at a $900K pre-money valuation, disclosed directly via its LinkedIn presence. Before launch, a $10K early investment helped get the engine running. No investor name-dropping. No victory lap. Capital went where it should go: ops, sales motion, IPFS platform expansion, Blockchain Names integration, and enterprise gateway provisioning. Quiet money tends to be serious money, especially when it shows up early and stays focused.

Frank Corsi brings decades of infrastructure scars to the table, dating back to the early internet. Blockchain Names is not an accessory here, it is connective tissue. Human-readable naming layered on top of content addressing turns cryptographic permanence into something people can actually remember, organize, and monetize. That is where storage stops being passive and starts acting like an asset class.

The freemium model actually means free, with unlimited pinning, nested folders, and shareable links across a global IPFS mesh. Pro and Enterprise tiers unlock APIs, analytics, SLAs, and white-label capability through WHMCS, quietly enabling hosting providers to resell decentralized storage without rebuilding their stack. A Galaxy Corporation case study shows zero asset load failures, 30% faster scene loads, and a 20% revenue lift when assets stop disappearing.

Kate Winocks leads performance marketing from Norwood, Massachusetts, translating infrastructure into adoption while node clusters scale across North America, Europe, and Asia with 99.9% uptime targets. Web3 Files Network is not chasing applause. It is filing data where it belongs, naming it properly, and letting it exist without permission. Storage that stays put has a way of changing how people build, sell, and trust the internet.

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