The Good Tech Companies - Educational Byte: Cryptocurrency Mining and Centralization Issues
Episode Date: January 9, 2025This story was originally published on HackerNoon at: https://hackernoon.com/educational-byte-cryptocurrency-mining-and-centralization-issues. Crypto mining creates new ...tokens in several networks, including Bitcoin. But it also can be a source of centralization and censorship. Check more stories related to web3 at: https://hackernoon.com/c/web3. You can also check exclusive content about #crypto-mining, #asic-mining, #crypto-mining-farms, #pool-mining, #censorship, #obyte, #centralized-mining, #good-company, and more. This story was written by: @obyte. Learn more about this writer by checking @obyte's about page, and for more stories, please visit hackernoon.com. Crypto mining is a cryptographic process in which machines solve very complex calculations that allow for the creation of new blocks and the release of new tokens inside a distributed network. It’s an effective way to avoid double spending and create non-government-backed money, but it also uses a lot of electrical energy.
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Educational Byte. Cryptocurrency mining and centralization issues, by Obite.
As you may know, anything and everything in the digital realm can be replicated,
copied and pasted. For a while, it happened the same with non-institutional backed attempts at
digital cash. The risk of double spending, replicating the same coins to spend them twice, was there.
The first ever cryptocurrency, Bitcoin, BTC, solved the double spending problem by employing
a process metaphorically called, mining. If we looked at, mining, in a dictionary,
we'd find something like, removing minerals from the ground. So, in our case, is mining
removing bitcoins from the internet or something like that?
Well, not really. As we mentioned earlier, the term is purely metaphorical. In reality,
crypto mining is a cryptographic, mathematical, process in which numerous machines, computers or
specialized devices, solve very complex calculations that allow for the creation of new blocks and the
release of new tokens inside a distributed network. Actually, those machines compete against the others to solve it first
and get the prize in the form of new coins. You can imagine it as a massive digital puzzle-solving
competition where thousands of people, computers, race to solve incredibly complex riddles.
This mechanism is called proof-of-work, POW. Think of POW as the competition rules.
Only those who put in the effort to solve puzzles can claim the prize.
Bitcoin is the most famous example, but other cryptocurrencies, like Monero and Dogecoin,
also use proof-of-work. It's an effective way to avoid double spending and create
non-government-backed money, but it also uses a lot of electrical energy since all those computers work very hard to solve the puzzles. Who are crypto miners? In theory, anyone, anywhere,
could be a crypto miner and join any POW network without any formal requisite.
It's even encouraged because that's the point of a decentralized network. The more people,
the better. However, practice could better care, especially if we're talking about big networks
like Bitcoin,
in which the mining difficulty has increased to very incredible levels with every miner that
has joined over the years. In the early days, anyone could mine Bitcoins with only a common CPU.
That's changed, a lot. Mining difficulty on the Bitcoin network has increased to such a point
that no it's only possible to mine with specialized machines.
ASIC mining machines are specialized computers built specifically for mining cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin. Unlike regular computers, they're designed to solve Bitcoin's POW puzzles much
faster, but they can only mine specific cryptocurrencies. These machines can be
pricey, ranging from a few hundred dollars for older models to for $16,000 for the latest,
most powerful ones. There are also mining farms. These are large facilities filled with hundreds
or even thousands of ASIC machines, all working together to mine Bitcoin. Big companies own many
of these farms, making Bitcoin mining a professional, large-scale industry. For smaller
miners, joining mining pools,
groups of miners sharing resources and splitting rewards, has become the only viable way to compete.
Today, institutional or group mining is the way to go with Bitcoin, making solo mining almost impossible. Bitcoin mining requires technical skills and a significant budget to make any real
profit, therefore, miners are often private companies or
private-owned mining pools. This could be slightly different with other coins like Monero or Dogecoin,
but mining pools are very common platforms, not only available for the Bitcoin network.
Centralization in Crypto Mining Centralization in crypto mining occurs
when a few entities control most of a cryptocurrency network's mining power.
This consolidation is a growing concern because it undermines the original purpose of cryptocurrencies,
a decentralized, censorship-resistant financial system. When only a handful of mining pools or
corporations dominate, they gain significant influence over the network, enabling them to
prioritize transactions, exclude certain users, or even enforce governmental or
corporate policies. This centralization also opens the door to surveillance and manipulation.
Mining operators can censor or block specific transactions if pressured by authorities.
It's already happened in other networks, beyond Bitcoin. In extreme cases, a few entities
controlling the majority of the hashrate could collude, launching a 51%
attack to rewrite the blockchain or, more likely, just censor certain users.
A softdeckemer 2024, for instance, over 78% of the Bitcoin hashrate is controlled by only
four mining pools, Coindance. Obite provides a solution to these risks with its directed
acyclic graph, DAG, architecture, which requires no miners or
validators. This eliminates centralized control, creating a network free from potential censorship
and manipulation. By making participation accessible to all without heavy investments
in hardware, Obite ensures a genuinely decentralized environment that fulfills
the original promise of cryptocurrency. Info featured vector image by Freepik.
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