Aleo runs the AleoBFT consensus mechanism, a proof-of-work design built around zero-knowledge proof computation rather than traditional hashing. The chain launched its mainnet in 2025 and is one of the youngest ASIC-mineable networks in production. The MillionMiner catalog covers 14 dedicated Aleo miners including the IceRiver AE1 Lite, AE2, AE3, and the Goldshell AE Max.
Early ASIC adopters in new proof-of-work networks face less competition than miners entering after network difficulty has climbed. The IceRiver AE1 Lite (300 MH/s at 500W) is a compact entry point for home miners and small operators. The Goldshell AE Max (360 MH/s at 9.17 J/MH) is built for professional deployments where efficiency at scale matters more than upfront cost.
Hardware selection is currently limited to 14 models because manufacturers are still ramping production. Specifications and pricing on Aleo equipment update more frequently than mature categories, so the catalog reflects the most recent confirmed availability from each supplier.
Every miner ships DDP and qualifies for hosting at MillionMiner's US facilities.
Pierwsza na świecie blockchain oparty na dowodzie ZK — teraz możliwa do kopania za pomocą ASIC
Aleo jest unikalną spośród innych kopalnialnych blockchainów. Zbudowany od podstaw wokół dowodów zerowej wiedzy, Aleo wykorzystuje swój konsensus oparty na proof-of-work nie tylko do zabezpieczania sieci — ale także do faktycznego generowania kryptograficznych dowodów, które napędzają prywatne, programowalne inteligentne kontrakty. Górnicy na Aleo nie po prostu haszują dowolne dane: wykonują intensywną obliczeniowo pracę polegającą na generowaniu dowodów zk-SNARK, co umożliwia tworzenie prywatnościowych aplikacji Aleo. To zupełnie nowa kategoria wydobycia, z długoterminowym, strukturalnym popytem napędzanym przez rzeczywiste obliczenia.
Konsensus
AleoBFT
PoW + BFT hybrydowy
Nagroda za blok
~76.6072 ALEO
System dowodowy
zkSNARK
PoW oparty na zk-SNARK
Czas blokady
~28 sec
Oś czasu Aleo
Od badań nad Zero-Knowledge do kopalnego głównego łańcucha blockchain
2019Aleo Założone
Howard Wu i jego zespół założyli Aleo Systems. Rozpoczyna się badania nad zastosowaniem zk-SNARKs w pełnoprogowalnym blockchainie — nie tylko w pojedynczej aplikacji.
2020Whitepaper & Leo
Aleo przedstawia swoją wizję techniczną. Rozpoczyna się publiczny rozwój Leo — języka programowania wysokiego poziomu do pisania aplikacji ZK —.</numerusform
2021Testnet I i II
Uruchomienie publicznych testnetów. Tysiące górników bierze udział w testowaniu mechanizmu wydobycia PoSW (Proof of Succinct Work) za pomocą sprzętu GPU.
2022Finansowanie serii B
Aleo pozyskuje 200 mln dolarów w rundzie Series B. Inwestycja potwierdza tezę o warstwie aplikacji ZK-proof na skalę instytucjonalną.
2023Testnet III & Wsparcie ASIC
Rozszerzona faza testnetu. Pierwsi producenci ASIC rozpoczynają rozwój dedykowanego sprzętu PoSW, ukierunkowanego na obciążenie obliczeniowe zk-proof Aleo.
2024Uruchomienie głównej sieci
Aleo mainnet uruchomiony. Koparki ASIC od Bitmain i innych producentów rozpoczynają wdrażanie produkcji na działającej sieci.
Technologia i Wizja
Dlaczego Aleo reprezentuje nowy paradygmat w kopaniu Proof-of-Work
Każdy inny blockchain oparty na dowodzie pracy używa wydobycia jako mechanizmu bezpieczeństwa — górnicy rywalizują o znalezienie rozwiązania haszującego spełniającego cel trudności sieci, praca jest arbitralna, a jedynym wynikiem jest bezpieczeństwo bloku. Aleo jest absolutnie inne. Na Aleo "praca" w dowodzie pracy to generowanie dowodów krótkich nierozłącznych wiedzy zero-knowledge — zk-SNARKs — które są faktycznie wykorzystywane przez sieć do umożliwienia prywatnych, programowalnych umów smart.
Oznacza to, że górnicy Aleo nie zużywają energii elektrycznej na bezsensowne obliczenia hash. Wykonują oni prawdziwe obliczenia kryptograficzne, które mają realną użyteczność: dowodzenie, że prywatne transakcje i przejścia stanu aplikacji są ważne, nie ujawniając ich treści. W miarę rozwoju ekosystemu Aleo i wdrażania kolejnych aplikacji, popyt na generowanie dowodów — a tym samym na sprzęt do kopania — ma strukturalny impuls, którego bitcoinowe kopanie zasadniczo nie posiada.
Dla górników ta teza jest przekonująca: nie tylko spekulujesz na cenie kryptowaluty, ale bierzesz udział w warstwie infrastrukturalnej prywatnościowej, programowalnej blockchain, która zebrała ponad 200 milionów dolarów od inwestorów instytucjonalnych i ma wśród swoich wsparcia największe firmy venture capital.
Mechanizm Górniczy
Dowód Zwięzłej Pracy (PoSW): Kopanie, Które Wykonuje Prawdziwą Pracę
Konsensus PoSW Aleo jest najbardziej innowacyjnym technicznie mechanizmem wydobycia w produkcji dzisiaj. Oto jak to działa — i dlaczego ma znaczenie dla Twojej tezy inwestycyjnej.
Czym jest zk-SNARK?
Zero-Knowledge Succinct Non-Interactive Argument of Knowledge to kryptograficzny dowód, który pozwala jednej stronie (dowodzącemu) przekonać drugą stronę (weryfikatora), że dane twierdzenie jest prawdziwe — bez ujawniania jakichkolwiek informacji o tym, dlaczego jest ono prawdziwe. Innymi słowy: możesz udowodnić, że znasz secret, lub że transakcja jest ważna, nie ujawniając sekretu ani szczegółów transakcji. To jest matematyczna podstawa, która umożliwia tworzenie prywatnych smart kontraktów Aleo.
Jak PoSW wykorzystuje zk-SNARKs do kopania
W dowodzie zwięzłej pracy Aleo, górnicy rywalizują o wygenerowanie prawidłowego dowodu zk-SNARK dla aktualnego zagadnienia bloku. Zagadnienie to jest problemem obliczeniowym, którego rozwiązanie wymaga rzeczywistej pracy nad generowaniem dowodów — a nie dowolnego haszowania SHA. Pierwszy górnik, który wyprodukuje ważny dowód spełniający cel trudności sieci, wygrywa nagrodę za blok. Dowód ten jest następnie przechowywany na łańcuchu i może zostać zweryfikowany przez dowolny węzeł w ciągu kilku milisekund.
AleoBFT: Hybrydowa warstwa konsensusu
Aleo stosuje hybrydowy konsensus zwany AleoBFT, który łączy kopanie PoSW z warstwą finalności odporną na błędy bizantyjskie. Górnicy tworzą bloki poprzez generowanie dowodu PoSW. Walidatorzy (odrębna rola) następnie finalizują te bloki, korzystając z konsensusu BFT, zapewniając szybką, deterministyczną finalność bez rezygnacji z zdecentralizowanego modelu bezpieczeństwa opartego na dowodzie pracy. Ten hybrydowy schemat umożliwia Aleo bloki trwające około 10 sekund, jednocześnie zapewniając kryptograficzną finalność.
Jak działa kopanie Aleo PoSW — krok po kroku
01
Puzzle Broadcast
Sieć transmituje aktualną zagadkę bloku — problem generowania dowodu zk-SNARK opartego na nagłówku poprzedniego bloku i bieżących parametrach epoki. Wszyscy górnicy otrzymują tę samą zagadkę jednocześnie.
02
Wyścig Generacji Dowodów
Twój ASIC wykonuje obliczeniowo intensywną pracę polegającą na generowaniu kandydatów dowodów zk-SNARK. To nie jest haszowanie losowych danych — to prawdziwa kryptograficzna operacja obliczeniowa dowodów. Sprzęt zoptymalizowany pod kątem tego obciążenia (PoSW ASICs) może generować dowody wielokrotnie szybciej niż CPU czy GPU.
03
Cel trudności osiągnięty
Gdy Twoja wygenerowana dowód spełnia obecny cel trudności sieci — czyli posiada wymaganą właściwość zdefiniowaną przez zagadkę — Twój górnik znalazł poprawne rozwiązanie bloku. Dowód jest natychmiast przesyłany do sieci.
04
Zakończenie BFT i nagroda
walidatorzy weryfikują złożony dowód (weryfikacja jest prawie natychmiastowa dla zk-SNARKów) i finalizują blok za pomocą AleoBFT. Nagroda za blok jest rozdzielana na zwycięskiego górnika. Tokeny ALEO trafiają do Twojego portfela samodzielnie zarządzanego zgodnie z harmonogramem wypłat Twojego puli.
Ekosystem
Leo, Prywatne DeFi, i dlaczego popyt na aplikacje ma znaczenie dla górników
Język programowania Leo firmy Aleo to wysokopoziomowy język inspirowany Rustem, stworzony specjalnie do pisania aplikacji z dowodami zerowej wiedzy. Programiści piszą programy Leo, które kompilują się do obwodów zk-SNARK, umożliwiając w pełni prywatne inteligentne kontrakty, gdzie zarówno dane wejściowe, jak i wyjściowe obliczeń mogą być zachowane w tajemnicy — coś niemożliwego na Ethereum czy innych transparentnych blockchainach.
Dla górników ekosystem aplikacji ma znaczenie, ponieważ generuje trwałe zapotrzebowanie na dowody, wykraczające poza same nagrody za bloki. Im więcej aplikacji Leo uruchomiono — prywatne protokoły DeFi, poufne systemy głosowania, narzędzia do weryfikacji tożsamości, infrastruktura finansowa zachowująca zgodę — tym bardziej rośnie zapotrzebowanie sieci na obliczenia dowodowe. To jest strukturalnie inne od kopania Bitcoin, gdzie jedynym motorem długoterminowych dochodów górnika jest nagroda za blok i opłaty transakcyjne.
Wizja Aleo dotycząca "programowalnej prywatności" — gdzie dowolna aplikacja może działać z gwarancjami zero-knowledge — stawia ją jako kluczową infrastrukturę dla kolejnej fali adopcji blockchain w regulowanych sektorach: finansach, opiece zdrowotnej, rządzie i tożsamości. Ta teza dotycząca zapotrzebowania instytucjonalnego jest powodem, dla którego Aleo przyciągnęło ponad 200 milionów dolarów finansowania przed uruchomieniem głównej sieci.
Co jest budowane na Aleo
Prywatne DeFi
AMM i protokoły pożyczkowe, gdzie rozmiary transakcji i saldo portfela pozostają poufne. Zapobiega to wyprzedzaniu i wykorzystywaniu MEV na poziomie protokołu.
Poufne głosowanie
Zarządzanie na łańcuchu i wybory, w których indywidualne głosy są prywatne, ale wynik zbiorczy jest publicznie weryfikowalny — matematycznie gwarantowane.
ZK Tożsamość i KYC
Udowodnij, że spełniasz wymogi zgodności (wiek, jurysdykcja, akredytacja) bez ujawniania swoich dokumentów tożsamości stronie przeciwnej lub blockchainowi.
Prywatne NFT i gry
Aktywa i kolekcje w grze, których własność jest możliwa do udowodnienia, lecz nie jest widoczna publicznie — umożliwiające mechaniki gry z ukrytą informacją w łańcuchu bloków.
Finanse zachowujące zgodność
Instytucje mogą udowodnić zgodność transakcji regulatorom bez ujawniania poufnych danych klientów na publicznym rejestrze — to duży krok w kierunku przyjęcia technologii blockchain przez instytucje.
Dostawa i Emisja
Ekonomia tokenów Aleo: Podaż, Dystrybucja i Udział Górników
Aleo ma całkowitą podaż wynoszącą 1,5 miliarda tokenów ALEO. Model emisji został zaprojektowany tak, aby nagradzać górników hojnie w pierwszych latach funkcjonowania sieci — gdy wzmacnianie bezpieczeństwa jest najważniejsze — z stopniowym zmniejszaniem się w czasie. Nagroda za blok rozpoczęła się na wyższym poziomie podczas uruchomienia głównej sieci i zmniejsza się zgodnie z harmonogramem, podobnie jak krzywa zmniejszania się nagrody o połowę, ale zastosowana w bardziej płynny sposób.
Ważna informacja dla górników Aleo: nagroda za blok jest podzielona między dowódcę (górnika, który generuje zwycięski dowód) a walidatora (który finalizuje blok za pomocą AleoBFT). Dowódca otrzymuje większość — około dwie trzecie nagrody za blok — podczas gdy walidator otrzymuje resztę. Podczas kopania poprzez pulę, otrzymujesz udział dowódcy w nagrodach proporcjonalny do Twojej wkładki w pracę dowodową.
W przeciwieństwie do czysto PoW monet, gdzie cały emisja trafia do górników, hybrydowy model Aleo dzieli nagrody pomiędzy dwa typy uczestników. Zrozum ten podział, zanim obliczysz oczekiwane zyski — Twoje efektywne dzienne dochody w ALEO opierają się na udziale proverów w nagrodzie blokowej, a nie na pełnej wartości nagrody blokowej.
Razem 1,5 miliarda ALEO
Dystrybucja tokenów ALEO
Wydobycie (Dowody)~500M33%
Nagrody blokowe wypłacane górnikom PoSW zgodnie z harmonogramem emisji. Główne źródło dochodu dla operatorów ASIC.
Walidatorzy~250M17%
Nagrody za blok przyznawane walidatorom AleoBFT, którzy kończą bloki. Oddzielnie od dochodów górników.
Ekosystem & Dotacje~375M25%
Zarezerwowane na granty dla deweloperów, rozwój ekosystemu i rozwój protokołu. Vested w czasie.
Inwestorzy i Zespół~375M25%
Wczesne alokacje dla inwestorów i zespołu. Zależne od długoterminowych harmonogramów dojścia do pełni wartości, dostosowanych do rozwoju sieci.
Klucz dla górników
Twój ASIC zarabia tylko na udziale Potwierdzających — około ⅔ wyświetlanej nagrody za blok. Użyj tego przy modelowaniu dziennego dochodu.
Jak Aleo się porównuje
Aleo vs inne blockchainy możliwe do wykopania
Aleo zajmuje unikalną pozycję na rynku kopalnianym. Żadna inna kopalna kryptowaluta nie oferuje prywatnych smart kontraktów ani PoW opartego na dowodach ZK.
CzynnikAleo (ALEO)Alephium (ALPH)Bitcoin (BTC)
System dowodowyALEO: zk-SNARK (PoSW)ALPH: Hash Blake3 (PoW)BTC: Skrót SHA-256 (PoW)
Rodzaj pracyALEO: Dowody ZK rzeczywisteALPH: Obliczanie haszaBTC: Obliczanie hasza
Inteligentne kontraktyALEO: Tak — prywatne (Leo)ALPH: Tak — publiczne (Ralph)BTC: Nie
Model PrywatnościALEO: Pełna prywatność ZKALPH: PrzezroczystyBTC: Przezroczysty
FinansowanieALEO: Ponad 200 mln dolarów pozyskanychALPH: Rozsądnie finansowanyBTC: N/D (2009)
Aleo jest jedyną blockchain w tej porównaniu, gdzie górnicy wykonują kryptograficznie użyteczną pracę, która bezpośrednio napędza główny produkt sieci — prywatne programowalne obliczenia.
Dom vs Przemysł
Wydobywanie Aleo z domu: czego się spodziewać
Charakterystyka sprzętu do kopania Aleo w dużej mierze zależy od konkretnej generacji ASIC. Ponieważ generowanie dowodu PoSW wymaga innego obciążenia obliczeniowego niż hashowanie SHA-256 czy Scrypt, pobór mocy ASIC różni się bardziej w zależności od typów maszyn. Podstawowe ASICy Aleo skierowane do domowych górników zostały opracowane z poborem mocy w przedziale 500–1200 W — co jest możliwe do obsługi przy standardowej infrastrukturze elektrycznej domu.
Rynek ASIC dla Aleo jest młodszy niż Bitcoin czy Litecoin, co stwarza zarówno szanse, jak i niepewność dla domowych górników. Wczesni użytkownicy, którzy wdrażają sprzęt podczas gdy sieć wciąż rozwija swoje ekosystem ASIC, mogą potencjalnie skorzystać z niższej trudności i wyższego udziału dziennych nagród na maszynę — ale rynek rozwija się szybko, a sprzęt od różnych producentów staje się dostępny. Sprawdź nasze oferty produktów, aby zobaczyć dostępne obecnie ASIC-y Aleo oraz ich zweryfikowane parametry hashowania.
Skala przemysłowa
Pozycjonowanie na parterze w sieci wspieranej przez 200 milionów dolarów
Dla operatorów przemysłowych Aleo przedstawia rzadką okazję: uruchomienie znacznej mocy obliczeniowej w dobrze finansowanym, technicznie wiarygodnym środowisku, podczas gdy ekosystem ASIC jest jeszcze na wczesnym etapie rozwoju. Wsparcie instytucjonalne (seria B o wartości 200 mln dolarów), aktywna społeczność deweloperów aplikacji Leo oraz jasny przypadek użycia infrastruktury prywatności ZK wskazują na długoterminowe, strukturalne zapotrzebowanie na dowody obliczeniowe.
Duże operacje wydobycia Aleo korzystają z tych samych korzyści ekonomicznych co inne farmy ASIC — heldowe kontrakty energetyczne, usługi colocation oraz hurtowe zakupy sprzętu. Kluczowym wyróżnikiem jest to, że praca związana z generowaniem dowodów przez Aleo jest oparta na erze GPU, co oznacza, że przewaga ASIC nad sprzętem konsumenckim wciąż jest bardzo duża, a pierwsze firmy korzystające z tej technologii uzyskują proporcjonalnie większą część nagród za bloki.
Wczesny rynek ASICPonad 200 mln USD wsparcia instytucjonalnego
Przewodnik dla kupującego
Wybór odpowiedniego górnika Aleo
Wybór ASIC Aleo opiera się na trzech kluczowych wskaźnikach — z jednym istotnym wyjątkowym elementem unikalnym dla sprzętu do generowania dowodów PoSW.
Współczynnik prób (s/t lub prób/s)
Wydobycie Aleo jest mierzone w dowodach na sekundę (proof/s) lub zagadkach coinbase na sekundę (c/s), a nie w TH/s czy MH/s. Wynika to z faktu, że jednostką pracy jest dowód zk-SNARK, a nie hasz. Wyższy wskaźnik dowodów oznacza większy proporcjonalny udział w dziennych nagrodach za bloki. Porównuj maszyny według tego wskaźnika, a nie tylko pod względem zużycia energii.
Więcej dowodów = Więcej ALEO
Efektywność energetyczna (W/przytoczenie)
Dla górników Aleo wydajność wyrażana jest w watach na dowód na sekundę (W/dowód). Im niższy, tym lepiej — oznacza to, że każdy wygenerowany dowód zużywa mniej energii elektrycznej. W miarę dojrzewania rynku ASIC i pojawiania się nowszych generacji układów scalonych, wskaźniki W/dowód ulegają znaczącej poprawie. Zawsze porównuj wydajność między maszynami, a nie tylko surowe wskaźniki dowodów.
Niższy = Bardziej opłacalny
Wsparcie oprogramowania układowego i protokołów
Protokół Aleo jest aktywnie rozwijany od momentu uruchomienia głównej sieci. W przeciwieństwie do Bitcoin, gdzie specyfikacja SHA-256 nie zmieniła się przez 15 lat, parametry PoSW Aleo i struktura zagadek mogą być aktualizowane wraz z dojrzewaniem protokołu. Zawsze sprawdzaj, czy producent Twojego ASIC zapewnia aktywne aktualizacje firmware'u i wyraźne gwarancje kompatybilności z główną siecią przed zakupem.
Krytyczna zgodność protokołów
Liczby
Zrozumienie opłacalności wydobycia Aleo
Rentowność wydobycia Aleo ma kilka unikalnych zmiennych w porównaniu do innych monet PoW — przede wszystkim podział nagród pomiędzy proverem a walidatorem oraz ewoluująca natura trudności zagadki PoSW.
01
Cena ALEO (USD)
ALEO to niedawno uruchomiony token mainnet, który cechuje się większą zmiennością cen niż bardziej ugruntowane monety wydobywcze. Tokeny na wczesnym etapie mogą doświadczać dużych wahań cen w obu kierunkach, napędzanych wydarzeniami związanymi z notowaniami, wiadomościami ekosystemu oraz ogólnymi warunkami rynkowymi. Górnicy, którzy mogą działać z zyskiem przy cenach ALEO o 50–60% niższych od wartości obliczonej na dzień zakupu, są w najkorzystniejszej pozycji. Trzymanie ALEO zgromadzonego w okresach niskich cen jest powszechną strategią dla górników z długoterminową wiarą w tezę dotyczącą infrastruktury prywatności ZK.
02
Procent od Prova — Twoja faktyczna część
W przeciwieństwie do czystych monet PoW, gdzie 100% nagrody za blok przypada kopaczowi, Aleo dzieli nagrody pomiędzy prowayerów (kopaczy) a walidatorów. Udział prowayera stanowi około dwie trzecie nagrody za blok. Oznacza to, że jeśli nagroda za blok wyświetla się jako około 23 ALEO, Twoje efektywne zarobki jako kopacza wynoszą około 15–16 ALEO za blok znaleziony przez Twój pool. Zawsze korzystaj z wartości udziału prowayera — a nie brutto nagrody za blok — przy obliczaniu dziennego dochodu i ROI.
03
Trudność dowodu sieciowego
Trudność łamigłówki PoSW Aleo dostosowuje się, aby osiągnąć stałe czasy bloków, gdy coraz więcej sprzętu do generowania dowodów wchodzi do użytku. W miarę jak rynek ASIC dla Aleo rośnie — a rośnie szybko po uruchomieniu głównej sieci — trudność będzie się zwiększać, a proporcjonalna część nagród każdego urządzenia będzie się zmniejszać. To taka sama trajektoria, jak w przypadku każdej sieci PoW przechodzącej od dominacji CPU/GPU do ASIC, ale skompresowana w krótszym okresie, ponieważ rozwój ASIC rozpoczął się blisko momentu uruchomienia głównej sieci. Szacuj trudność modelową ostrożnie.
04
Koszt energii elektrycznej i dowód skuteczności
Zapotrzebowanie na moc ASIC Aleo waha się od około 500W do ponad 3000W, w zależności od jednostki. Ponieważ obciążenie (generowanie dowodów zk-SNARK) jest bardziej złożone obliczeniowo niż haszowanie SHA-256, wczesne generacje ASIC mają tendencję do być mniej wydajne energetycznie niż odpowiednie generacje koparek Bitcoin. Ta różnica zmniejsza się z każdą kolejną generacją ASIC. Oblicz całkowity dzienny koszt energii i odejmij go od brutto zarobków ALEO (udział dowódcy), aby uzyskać swój dzienny zysk netto.
05
Harmonogram emisji nagrody blokowej
Nagroda za blok Aleo zmniejsza się z czasem zgodnie z harmonogramem. Krzywa emisji wstępnie nakłada nagrody we wczesnych latach, aby zapewnić bezpieczeństwo sieci — co oznacza, że górnicy wdrażający się teraz znajdują się w fazie najwyższej nagrody w historii emisji Aleo. W miarę jak nagrody będą maleć w kolejnych latach, dochody górników będą coraz bardziej zależne od opłat transakcyjnych z aplikacji Leo i ceny tokena ALEO. To wczesne nakładanie emisji jest argumentem za szybkim wdrożeniem — oraz za zrozumieniem, że dzisiejsze wartości nagrody za blok są wyższe niż za 3–5 lat.
Wybór basenu
Najlepsze pule kopania Aleo
Oprogramowanie puli Aleo musi obsługiwać protokół przesyłania dowodów PoSW — który jest strukturalnie inny od standardowego punktu końcowego Stratum używanego przez koparki SHA-256 lub Scrypt. Zawsze sprawdzaj, czy wybrana pula ma natywne wsparcie dla Aleo PoSW oraz aktywną, utrzymywaną integrację z oprogramowaniem węzła głównego sieci Aleo przed podłączeniem sprzętu.
Ponieważ główna sieć Aleo jest stosunkowo nowa, ekosystem pul jest mniejszy niż Bitcoin czy Litecoin, ale rośnie szybko. Większe pule zapewniają bardziej stabilne dzienne wypłaty. Mniejsze pule oferują wyższą zmienność, ale czasami niższe opłaty. Dla większości operatorów ASIC, pule z czołowej 3 pod względem mocy haszowania to rozsądny domyślny wybór dla stabilności dochodów.
Aleo Pool (HiveOn)1%PPLNS
Jedna z największych pul Aleo pod względem hashratu. Niezawodna infrastruktura, natywne wsparcie PoSW, codzienne wypłaty, przejrzysty panel z zarobkami proverów/walidatorów.
Miningpool.center1%PPS+
Tryb PPS+ dla wypłat ALEO o zerowej wariancji. Dobry wybór dla operatorów, którzy potrzebują przewidywalnych codziennych dochodów. Wsparcie natywnej sieci głównej Aleo.
2Miners1%PPLNS
Ugruntowana wielo-kryptowalutowa pula z rosnącą obecnością Aleo. Zaufana infrastruktura, czysta historia wypłat, obsługa serwerów w Europie.
Flexpool0.5%PPLNS
Opcja z niską opłatą i wsparciem natywnym dla Aleo. Aktywny zespół deweloperski, przejrzysta struktura opłat, dobra reputacja w społeczności od czasów ETH.
Community Pool (Aleo Network)0%PPLNS
Basen społecznościowy bez opłat. Mniejszy, ale zgodny ideologicznie z misją decentralizacji Aleo. Najlepszy dla minersów, którzy chcą także wspierać zdrowie sieci.
Uważaj
Typowe błędy przy wydobywaniu Aleo
Nowa architektura Aleo tworzy pułapki unikalne dla wydobycia ZK-proof. Unikaj ich przed zainwestowaniem.
Używanie pełnej nagrody blokowej w obliczeniach ROI
Najczęstszy błąd podczas kopania Aleo. Wyświetlana nagroda za blok obejmuje zarówno udział dowodcy (wydobywcy), jak i walidatora. Twoje ASIC zarabia tylko na części dowódcy — około dwie trzecie całościowej kwoty. Użycie pełnej nagrody za blok w kalkulatorze rentowności będzie zawyżać oczekiwane dzienne dochody o około 50%. Zawsze potwierdzaj aktualny procent udziału dowódcy w oficjalnej dokumentacji Aleo przed modelowaniem zwrotów.
Kupno sprzętu bez potwierdzenia zgodności z protokołem
Specyfikacja PoSW Aleo jest inna niż w przypadku innych algorytmów kopania. Ogólne "koparki ASIC", które twierdzą, że obsługują Blake3 lub inne kompatybilności, nie są koparkami Aleo. Tylko sprzęt specjalnie zaprojektowany i przetestowany do generowania dowodów PoSW Aleo zapewni znaczący hashrate w sieci Aleo. Przed zakupem zweryfikuj wyraźną kompatybilność z mainnetem Aleo u producenta.
Ignorując szybko rozwijający się ekosystem ASIC
Aleo mainnet jest nowy, a sprzęt ASIC od wielu producentów pojawia się na rynku w szybkim tempie. Trudność rośnie szybko. Górnicy, którzy opierają swoje prognozy ROI na dzisiejszej trudności bez uwzględnienia wzrostu 2–3× w ciągu najbliższego roku, zauważą, że ich rzeczywiste zyski będą znacznie poniżej oczekiwań. Twórz modele z ostrożnością, biorąc pod uwagę skrajnie pesymistyczne scenariusze trudności.
Mylenie wskaźnika dowodu z hashratem
Wydajność Aleo jest mierzona w dowodach na sekundę (c/s), a nie w TH/s czy MH/s. Te jednostki nie są porównywalne z innymi algorytmami kopania. Nie próbuj bezpośrednio porównywać "hashrate" koparki Aleo z koparkami Bitcoin lub Kaspa. Używaj kalkulatorów rentowności specyficznych dla ALEO, które biorą pod uwagę szybkość dowodów i obecną trudność sieci.
Protokół Aleo jest aktywnie rozwijany po głównym uruchomieniu sieci. Parametry PoSW i struktury zagadek mogą być aktualizowane poprzez ulepszenia sieci. ASIC Aleo z przestarzałym oprogramowaniem może generować nieprawidłowe dowody, kopać na niewłaściwym odgałęzieniu łańcucha lub nie łączyć się z zaktualizowanym oprogramowaniem pul miningowych. Monitoruj kanały producentów i stosuj aktualizacje niezwłocznie.
Z perspektywy roli Walidatora a Dowodzącego
Niektórzy uczestnicy Aleo działają jako walidatorzy (którzy finalizują bloki za pomocą AleoBFT), a nie jako dowody (kopacze). Te role mają inne wymagania sprzętowe i różne struktury nagród. Miners ASIC to dowody. Nie myl dokumentacji puli nagród walidatora z rzeczywistym dochodem twojego kopacza — to odrębni uczestnicy systemu AleoBFT.
Najczęściej zadawane pytania
FAQ dotyczące wydobycia Aleo
Wszystko, co musisz wiedzieć przed zakupem swojego pierwszego koparki Aleo ASIC.
'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?',
'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.',
],
[
'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?',
'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.',
],
[
'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?',
'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?',
'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?',
'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.',
],
[
'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?',
'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.',
],
[
'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?',
'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.',
],
] as $i => $faq)
Aleo is the only production blockchain where mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. The proofs miners generate power private smart contracts, creating structural alignment between mining and network utility that no other PoW chain offers.
'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?',
'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.',
],
[
'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?',
'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.',
],
[
'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?',
'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?',
'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?',
'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.',
],
[
'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?',
'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.',
],
[
'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?',
'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.',
],
] as $i => $faq)
PoSW requires miners to generate valid zk-SNARK proofs for block puzzles — genuinely complex cryptographic computation. Unlike SHA-256 (Bitcoin) where hash results are disposable, PoSW outputs are cryptographically useful and stored on-chain. This is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs for Aleo.
'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?',
'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.',
],
[
'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?',
'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.',
],
[
'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?',
'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?',
'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?',
'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.',
],
[
'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?',
'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.',
],
[
'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?',
'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.',
],
] as $i => $faq)
The IceRiver AE3 (2 GH/s) is currently the most powerful Aleo miner. The Goldshell AE Max (360 MH/s) and AE Box Pro (44 MH/s) offer excellent alternatives. For home use, the compact IceRiver AE0 (50 MH/s) is ideal. All available with free DDP shipping.
'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?',
'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.',
],
[
'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?',
'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.',
],
[
'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?',
'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?',
'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?',
'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.',
],
[
'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?',
'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.',
],
[
'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?',
'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.',
],
] as $i => $faq)
Profitability depends on ALEO price, difficulty and electricity cost. With efficient ASICs at $0.07/kWh hosting, Aleo mining can generate meaningful returns. The growing demand for privacy applications adds structural long-term value to proof generation.
'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?',
'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.',
],
[
'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?',
'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.',
],
[
'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?',
'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?',
'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?',
'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.',
],
[
'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?',
'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.',
],
[
'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?',
'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.',
],
] as $i => $faq)
GPU mining was viable during testnets but dedicated PoSW ASICs now offer substantially higher proof rates per watt. As ASICs dominate the network, GPU mining becomes marginal. For competitive Aleo mining in 2026, purpose-built ASICs are the only viable choice.
'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?',
'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.',
],
[
'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?',
'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.',
],
[
'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?',
'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?',
'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?',
'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.',
],
[
'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?',
'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.',
],
[
'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?',
'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.',
],
] as $i => $faq)
AleoBFT combines PoSW proof-of-work with BFT finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators finalize using BFT consensus. As a miner, you are a prover — your only job is generating proofs as fast as possible through your pool. ~10 second block times.
'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?',
'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.',
],
[
'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?',
'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.',
],
[
'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?',
'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?',
'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?',
'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.',
],
[
'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?',
'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.',
],
[
'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?',
'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.',
],
] as $i => $faq)
Aleo splits rewards between provers (miners) and validators. Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward. Always use the prover share in profitability calculations. Check Aleo official docs for current split ratios.
'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?',
'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.',
],
[
'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?',
'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.',
],
[
'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?',
'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?',
'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?',
'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.',
],
[
'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?',
'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.',
],
[
'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?',
'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.',
],
] as $i => $faq)
Leo is Aleo's smart contract language for zk-SNARK applications. Every Leo app deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond block rewards — meaning a thriving app ecosystem drives sustained revenue for your mining hardware.
'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?',
'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.',
],
[
'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?',
'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.',
],
[
'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?',
'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?',
'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?',
'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.',
],
[
'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?',
'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.',
],
[
'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?',
'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.',
],
] as $i => $faq)
Yes. Purchase any Aleo miner from our shop and add hosting from $0.07/kWh. Real-time dashboard, 24/7 support, free repairs. Pool configuration included in onboarding.
'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?',
'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.',
],
[
'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?',
'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.',
],
[
'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?',
'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?',
'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?',
'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.',
],
[
'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?',
'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.',
],
[
'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?',
'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.',
],
] as $i => $faq)
Connect power, plug in Ethernet, access the web dashboard, enter your Aleo pool PoSW stratum address and wallet. Verify proof submissions within 15-30 minutes. For hosted miners, we handle all setup.
'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?',
'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.',
],
[
'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?',
'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.',
],
[
'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?',
'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?',
'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?',
'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.',
],
[
'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?',
'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.',
],
[
'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?',
'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.',
],
] as $i => $faq)
Major Aleo pools include HeroMiners, F2Pool and dedicated Aleo pools. Choose a pool with low latency and compatible PoSW stratum support. Most charge 1-2% fees.
'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?',
'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.',
],
[
'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?',
'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.',
],
[
'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?',
'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?',
'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?',
'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.',
],
[
'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?',
'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.',
],
[
'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?',
'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.',
],
] as $i => $faq)
Aleo has strong credentials: $200M+ venture funding, novel privacy technology (programmable zk-SNARKs), active developer ecosystem. Higher volatility than Bitcoin mining but potentially higher upside. Many miners treat it as a growth allocation alongside BTC.
'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?',
'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.',
],
[
'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?',
'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.',
],
[
'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?',
'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?',
'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?',
'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.',
],
[
'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?',
'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.',
],
[
'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?',
'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.',
],
] as $i => $faq)
The IceRiver AE3 uses ~1,200W, the Goldshell AE Max ~3,500W, the AE Box Pro ~700W, the IceRiver AE0 ~100W. Monthly cost at $0.07/kWh (hosting): AE3 ~$60, AE0 ~$5. Relatively low power draw.
'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?',
'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.',
],
[
'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?',
'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.',
],
[
'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?',
'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?',
'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?',
'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.',
],
[
'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?',
'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.',
],
[
'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?',
'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.',
],
] as $i => $faq)
IceRiver: 180-365 days by model. Goldshell: 180 days. For hosted miners, we provide free on-site repairs and RMA handling. See our FAQ for details.
'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?',
'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.',
],
[
'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?',
'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.',
],
[
'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?',
'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?',
'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?',
'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.',
],
[
'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?',
'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.',
],
[
'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?',
'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.',
],
] as $i => $faq)
Yes — all Aleo miners ship with free worldwide DDP delivery. No customs, no import taxes. 50+ countries. In-stock dispatch within 1-3 business days.
'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?',
'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.',
],
[
'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?',
'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.',
],
[
'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?',
'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?',
'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?',
'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.',
],
[
'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?',
'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.',
],
[
'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?',
'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.',
],
] as $i => $faq)
The AE3 (2 GH/s, ~1,200W) offers superior efficiency. The AE Max (360 MH/s, ~3,500W) provides more raw hashrate but at higher power cost. The AE3 is generally recommended for its better proof-rate-per-watt ratio.
'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?',
'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.',
],
[
'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?',
'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.',
],
[
'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?',
'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?',
'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?',
'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.',
],
[
'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?',
'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.',
],
[
'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?',
'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.',
],
] as $i => $faq)
zk-SNARK (Zero-Knowledge Succinct Non-Interactive Argument of Knowledge) allows proving something is true without revealing the underlying data. Aleo uses this for private smart contracts. Miners generate these proofs, directly powering the privacy infrastructure.
'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?',
'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.',
],
[
'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?',
'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.',
],
[
'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?',
'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?',
'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?',
'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.',
],
[
'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?',
'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.',
],
[
'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?',
'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.',
],
] as $i => $faq)
Yes. Volume pricing and dedicated account managers for B2B orders. Contact our team with model, quantity and timeline. Combined purchase + hosting packages available.
'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?',
'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.',
],
[
'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?',
'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.',
],
[
'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?',
'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?',
'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?',
'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.',
],
[
'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?',
'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.',
],
[
'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?',
'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.',
],
] as $i => $faq)
The IceRiver AE0 (50 MH/s, ~100W, very quiet) and Goldshell AE Box (37 MH/s, ~160W) are the most home-friendly Aleo miners. Both run from standard outlets with minimal noise and heat.
'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?',
'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.',
],
[
'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?',
'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.',
],
[
'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?',
'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?',
'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?',
'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.',
],
[
'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?',
'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.',
],
[
'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?',
'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.',
],
] as $i => $faq)
Your pool sends ALEO directly to your wallet. MillionMiner never touches your rewards. Most pools pay out daily once minimum thresholds are reached. Block times are ~10 seconds for consistent payouts.
'a' => 'Aleo is the only production blockchain where the mining work is real zero-knowledge proof generation — not arbitrary hashing. Every other PoW coin (Bitcoin, Kaspa, Litecoin, Alephium) uses mining purely as a security mechanism, burning electricity on hash computations that have no intrinsic utility. On Aleo, the proofs miners generate are actually used by the network to power private, programmable smart contracts. This means mining directly enables Aleo\'s core product — programmable privacy — creating structural alignment between miner activity and network utility that does not exist in any other PoW chain.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW) and how is it different from SHA-256 mining?',
'a' => 'SHA-256 mining (Bitcoin) involves computing billions of hash functions until one meets the network\'s difficulty target. The computation has no output other than the block solution itself. PoSW requires miners to generate a valid zk-SNARK proof for the current block puzzle — a genuinely complex cryptographic computation whose output is a proof that can be verified and stored on-chain. The proof generation process is computationally intensive (which is why ASICs dramatically outperform GPUs) but the result is cryptographically useful, not disposable like a SHA-256 solution.',
],
[
'q' => 'How much of the block reward does an Aleo miner actually receive?',
'a' => 'Aleo splits block rewards between provers (miners who generate the winning PoSW proof) and validators (who finalise blocks via AleoBFT). Miners receive approximately two-thirds of the gross block reward — the prover share. The remainder goes to the validator. This means if the displayed block reward is ~23 ALEO, a miner earns approximately 15–16 ALEO. Always use the prover share in your profitability calculations, not the gross block reward figure. Check Aleo\'s official documentation for the current exact prover/validator split.',
],
[
'q' => 'Can I mine Aleo with a GPU in 2024?',
'a' => 'GPU mining of Aleo was the only option during the testnet and early mainnet phases, but dedicated PoSW ASICs have now reached the market and offer substantially higher proof rates per watt than GPUs. As ASICs proliferate across the network, GPU mining becomes increasingly marginal — the same trajectory seen with every PoW coin that transitions from GPU to ASIC dominance. For existing GPU hardware you can test profitability with a calculator, but any new investment in Aleo mining hardware should target purpose-built ASICs.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is AleoBFT and does it affect how I mine?',
'a' => 'AleoBFT is Aleo\'s hybrid consensus layer that combines PoSW proof-of-work with Byzantine Fault Tolerant finality. Miners (provers) generate blocks via PoSW. Validators — a separate participant type requiring different hardware and a stake — finalise those blocks using BFT consensus. As a miner running an ASIC, you are a prover and do not need to run a validator node. Your only job is generating valid PoSW proofs as fast as possible and submitting them through your pool. AleoBFT provides fast finality (~10 second blocks) without requiring you to understand the validator layer.',
],
[
'q' => 'What is the Leo programming language and why does it matter for miners?',
'a' => 'Leo is Aleo\'s high-level smart contract language designed to compile down to zk-SNARK circuits. Developers use Leo to write private, programmable applications — DeFi protocols, identity systems, voting tools — that run on Aleo with full zero-knowledge privacy guarantees. For miners, Leo matters because every Leo application deployed creates ongoing demand for proof computation beyond just block rewards. A thriving Leo application ecosystem means sustained, structurally driven demand for the proof generation your ASIC hardware provides — which is a stronger long-term revenue thesis than block rewards alone.',
],
[
'q' => 'Is Aleo a legitimate long-term mining investment?',
'a' => 'Aleo has strong institutional credentials: $200M+ raised from top-tier venture firms, a technically novel architecture that solves a real problem (programmable privacy), an active developer ecosystem, and mainnet that has been live and operational. The risks are those of any newer, smaller-cap mining asset: higher price volatility, a younger ASIC market with fewer hardware options, faster-growing network difficulty as hardware rolls out, and a longer path to the broad ecosystem adoption that would drive fee-based miner income. Many miners treat Aleo as a high-conviction growth allocation in a diversified mining portfolio rather than as a replacement for Bitcoin or Litecoin.',
],
[
'q' => 'How do I set up an Aleo ASIC miner?',
'a' => 'Setup follows the standard ASIC process with one important difference: you need an Aleo-compatible pool endpoint, not a standard Stratum URL. Connect your miner to your router via Ethernet, locate its IP in your router\'s device list, open the web dashboard, and enter your Aleo pool\'s PoSW stratum address plus your Aleo wallet address as the worker. Use the official Aleo wallet (aleo.org) or a compatible third-party wallet to receive payouts. Verify your pool dashboard shows active proof submissions within 15–30 minutes of setup. Our support team is available to assist with any setup questions.',
],
] as $i => $faq)
Available 24/7 via WhatsApp, email and phone. We help with miner selection, hosting and B2B orders. Contact us or visit our FAQ.
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Przeglądaj naszą pełną ofertę koparek Aleo PoSW ASIC powyżej. Ekosystem kopania ZK znajduje się na wczesnym etapie — pozycje zajęte teraz mają najwyższy potencjał stosunku nagrody do trudności w historii emisji Aleo. Nasz zespół pomoże Ci znaleźć odpowiednią maszynę do Twojej konfiguracji energetycznej i celów inwestycyjnych.