Codex is a decentralized data storage platform that provides exceptionally strong censorship resistance and durability guarantees. It serves as the storage layer of the [Logos](https://logos.co/) tech stack. Alongside the trustless agreement layer, [Nomos](http://nomos.tech), and the communications layer, [Waku](http://waku.org), it is one of the Logos Collective's foundational projects.
The remote storage landscape is dominated by an increasingly small number of internet powerhouses—Google, Microsoft, Amazon, etc. While these services score highly in terms of user experience and convenience, centralized cloud data storage suffers from the following drawbacks:
Centralized cloud storage providers have an established history of censoring data and, as de facto owners of said data, have the power to do so according to their own standards. Furthermore, centralized platforms have fallen victim to major data breaches and service outages on numerous occasions.
Such incidents have created a gap in the market for a decentralized, censorship-resistant alternative. Existing peer-to-peer storage and file-sharing networks address some of these issues—such as robustness in the face of network disruptions, and desirable resistance to censorship. Yet without adequate incentives and strong data durability guarantees, they make for unsuitable foundations upon which to build truly unstoppable applications.
Existing decentralized storage solutions purport to improve upon early P2P file-sharing platforms like eDonkey and Gnutella. However, the market still lacks a decentralized storage solution that is efficient in terms of storage and bandwidth usage, while offering performance and durability guarantees comparable to incumbents.