Buy Aleo Miners — zkSNARK Proof-of-Work ASIC Hardware

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.

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Buy Aleo Miners — zkSNARK Proof-of-Work ASIC Hardware
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Über Aleo Mining

Die weltweit erste ZK-Proof-Blockchain — jetzt mit ASIC abbaubar

Aleo ist anders als jede andere minbare Blockchain. Von Grund auf um Zero-Knowledge-Proofs herum aufgebaut, nutzt Aleo seinen Proof-of-Work-Konsens nicht nur zur Sicherung des Netzwerks – sondern um tatsächlich die kryptografischen Beweise zu erzeugen, die private, programmierbare Smart Contracts ermöglichen. Miner auf Aleo hashieren nicht einfach willkürliche Daten: Sie führen die rechenintensive Arbeit der zk-SNARK-Beweisgenerierung aus, die Aleos datenschutzfreundliche Anwendungen möglich macht. Dies ist eine grundlegend neue Kategorie des Minings mit langfristiger struktureller Nachfrage, die durch echte Berechnungen angetrieben wird.

Konsens

AleoBFT

PoW + BFT Hybrid

Blockbelohnung

~80.0341 ALEO

Beweissystem

zkSNARK

zk-SNARK basierter PoW

Blockzeit

~14 sec


Aleo Zeitachse

Von Zero-Knowledge-Forschung zu minable Mainnet

2019 Aleo gegründet

Howard Wu und sein Team gründeten Aleo Systems. Die Forschung beginnt zur Anwendung von zk-SNARKs auf eine vollständig programmierbare Blockchain — nicht nur auf eine einzelne Anwendung.

2020 Weißbuch & Leo

Aleo veröffentlicht seine technische Vision. Die Entwicklung von Leo — einer hochgradigen Programmiersprache zum Schreiben von ZK-Anwendungen — beginnt öffentlich.

2021 Testnetz I & II

Öffentliche Testnetze starten. Tausende von Minern nehmen an der Testung des PoSW (Proof of Succinct Work) Mining-Mechanismus unter Verwendung von GPU-Hardware teil.

2022 Serie-B-Finanzierung

Aleo sammelt 200 Millionen Dollar in der Series B. Die Investition validiert die ZK-Proof-Anwendungsschicht-These im institutionellen Maßstab.

2023 Testnet III & ASIC-Push

Erweiterte Testnet-Phase. Erste ASIC-Hersteller beginnen mit der Entwicklung von dedizierter PoSW-Hardware, die auf Aleos zk-proof Berechnungsaufwand abzielt.

2024 Mainnet-Start

Aleo-Hauptnetz geht live. ASIC-Miner von Bitmain und anderen Herstellern beginnen mit der Produktionsbereitstellung im Live-Netzwerk.

Technologie & Vision

Warum Aleo ein neues Paradigma im Proof-of-Work-Mining darstellt

Jede andere Proof-of-Work-Blockchain verwendet Mining als Sicherheitsmechanismus — Miner konkurrieren darum, eine Hash-Lösung zu finden, die dem Schwierigkeitsziel des Netzwerks entspricht, die Arbeit ist willkürlich, und die einzige Ausgabe ist die Sicherheit des Blocks. Aleo ist kategorisch anders. Auf Aleo besteht die "Arbeit" im Proof-of-Work in der Generierung von Zero-Knowledge-Succinct-Non-Interactive-Arguments-of-Knowledge — zk-SNARKs — die tatsächlich vom Netzwerk verbraucht werden, um private, programmierbare Smart Contracts zu ermöglichen.

Das bedeutet, dass Aleo-Miner keine Elektrizität für sinnlose Hash-Berechnungen verbrauchen. Sie führen echte kryptografische Berechnungen durch, die einen echten Nutzen haben: den Nachweis, dass private Transaktionen und Anwendungszustandsübergänge gültig sind, ohne deren Inhalte offenzulegen. Mit dem Wachstum des Aleo-Ökosystems und der Bereitstellung weiterer Anwendungen hat die Nachfrage nach der Generierung von Nachweisen – und damit nach Mining-Hardware – einen strukturellen Rückenwind, den das Bitcoin-Mining grundsätzlich nicht hat.

Für Miner ist diese These überzeugend: Sie spekulieren nicht nur auf den Preis einer Münze, sondern nehmen an der Infrastruktur-Ebene einer datenschutzfreundlichen, programmierbaren Blockchain teil, die über 200 Millionen Dollar von institutionellen Investoren gesammelt hat und bedeutende Risikokapitalfirmen zu ihren Unterstützern zählt.


Der Mining-Mechanismus

Proof of Succinct Work (PoSW): Mining, das echte Arbeit leistet

Aleo's PoSW-Konsens ist der technisch innovativste Mining-Mechanismus, der heute in Produktion ist. So funktioniert es — und warum es für Ihre Investmentthese wichtig ist.

Was ist ein zk-SNARK?

Ein Zero-Knowledge Succinct Non-Interactive Argument of Knowledge ist ein kryptografischer Beweis, der es einer Partei (dem Beweiser) ermöglicht, eine andere Partei (dem Prüfer) davon zu überzeugen, dass eine Aussage wahr ist – ohne Informationen darüber preiszugeben, warum sie wahr ist. Einfach ausgedrückt: Sie können beweisen, dass Sie ein Geheimnis kennen oder dass eine Transaktion gültig ist, ohne das Geheimnis oder die Einzelheiten der Transaktion preiszugeben. Dies ist die mathematische Grundlage, die Aleos private Smart Contracts möglich macht.

Wie PoSW zk-SNARKs für das Mining verwendet

In Aleos Proof of Succinct Work konkurrieren Miner darum, einen gültigen zk-SNARK-Beweis für das aktuelle Blockrätsel zu erzeugen. Das Rätsel ist ein rechnerisches Problem, dessen Lösung echte Beweisgenerierungsarbeit erfordert — nicht willkürliches SHA-Hashing. Der erste Miner, der einen gültigen Beweis produziert, der das Schwierigkeitsziel des Netzwerks erfüllt, gewinnt die Blockbelohnung. Der Beweis wird dann on-chain gespeichert und kann von jedem Knoten in Millisekunden verifiziert werden.

AleoBFT: Die hybride Konsensschicht

Aleo verwendet einen hybriden Konsens namens AleoBFT, der PoSW-Mining mit einer byzantinischen Fehlertoleranz-Schicht zur Finalität kombiniert. Miner erzeugen Blöcke durch PoSW-Beweisgenerierung. Validatoren (eine separate Rolle) finalisieren dann diese Blöcke mithilfe des BFT-Konsenses und bieten eine schnelle deterministische Finalität, ohne das dezentrale Sicherheitsmodell des Proof-of-Work zu opfern. Dieses hybride Design ermöglicht die ~10-sekündigen Blockzeiten von Aleo zusammen mit kryptografischer Finalität.

Wie Aleo PoSW Mining funktioniert — Schritt für Schritt

01

Puzzle Übertragung

Das Netzwerk sendet das aktuelle Blockrätsel aus — ein zk-SNARK Beweisgenerierungsproblem, das aus dem vorherigen Block-Header und den aktuellen Epoch-Parametern abgeleitet ist. Alle Miner erhalten gleichzeitig dasselbe Rätsel.

02

Beweisgenerierungsrennen

Ihr ASIC führt die rechenintensive Arbeit der Generierung von Kandidaten-zk-SNARK-Beweisen durch. Dies ist kein Hashing beliebiger Daten — es handelt sich um echte kryptografische Beweisberechnungen. Die für diese Arbeitslast optimierte Hardware (PoSW ASICs) kann Beweise um ein Vielfaches schneller generieren als CPUs oder GPUs.

03

Schwierigkeitsziel erreicht

Wenn Ihr generierter Beweis das aktuelle Schwierigkeitsziel des Netzwerks erfüllt – was bedeutet, dass er die erforderlichen Eigenschaften hat, die durch das Puzzle definiert sind – hat Ihr Miner eine gültige Blocklösung gefunden. Der Beweis wird sofort an das Netzwerk übermittelt.

04

BFT-Finalisierung & Belohnung

Validatoren überprüfen den eingereichten Nachweis (die Verifizierung ist bei zk-SNARKs nahezu sofort) und finalisieren den Block über AleoBFT. Die Blockbelohnung wird an den gewinnenden Miner verteilt. ALEO-Token gelangen gemäß dem Auszahlungsplan Ihres Pools in Ihre Selbstverwahrungs-Wallet.


Das Ökosystem

Leo, Private DeFi und warum die Nachfrage nach Anwendungen für Miner wichtig ist

Aleo's Leo-Programmiersprache ist eine von Rust inspirierte Hochsprache, die speziell für das Schreiben von Zero-Knowledge-Anwendungen entwickelt wurde. Entwickler schreiben Leo-Programme, die in zk-SNARK-Schaltungen kompiliert werden, wodurch vollständig private Smart Contracts ermöglicht werden, bei denen sowohl die Eingaben als auch die Ausgaben einer Berechnung vertraulich bleiben können – etwas, das auf Ethereum oder einer anderen transparenten Blockchain unmöglich ist.

Für Miner ist das Anwendungsökosystem wichtig, da es eine nachhaltige Nachfrage nach der Generierung von Nachweisen über die bloßen Blockbelohnungen hinaus schafft. Mit der Inbetriebnahme weiterer Leo-Anwendungen – private DeFi-Protokolle, vertrauliche Abstimmungssysteme, Identitätsverifizierungstools, compliance-wahrende Finanzinfrastruktur – wächst der Bedarf des Netzwerks an Nachweisberechnungen. Dies ist strukturell anders als beim Bitcoin-Mining, wo der einzige Antrieb für das langfristige Einkommen der Miner die Blockbelohnung und Transaktionsgebühren sind.

Aleos Vision von "programmierbarer Privatsphäre" — bei der jede Anwendung mit Zero-Knowledge-Garantien betrieben werden kann — positioniert es als kritische Infrastruktur für die nächste Welle der Blockchain-Adoption in regulierten Branchen: Finanzen, Gesundheitswesen, Regierung und Identität. Diese These zur institutionellen Nachfrage ist der Grund, warum Aleo über 200 Millionen US-Dollar an Finanzierung vor dem Mainnet angezogen hat.

Was auf Aleo gebaut wird

Privates DeFi

AMMs und Kreditprotokolle, bei denen Handelsgrößen und Wallet-Bestände vertraulich bleiben. Verhindert Front-Running und MEV-Ausnutzung auf Protokollebene.

Vertrauliche Abstimmung

On-Chain-Governanz und Wahlen, bei denen individuelle Stimmen privat sind, das aggregierte Ergebnis jedoch öffentlich überprüfbar — mathematisch garantiert.

ZK-Identität & KYC

Beweisen Sie, dass Sie die Compliance-Anforderungen (Alter, Gerichtsbarkeit, Akkreditierung) erfüllen, ohne Ihre Identitätsdokumente gegenüber einer Gegenpartei oder der Blockchain offenzulegen.

Private NFTs und Gaming

In-Game-Assets und Sammlerstücke, deren Eigentum nachweisbar, aber nicht öffentlich sichtbar ist – wodurch versteckte Informationsspielmechaniken on-chain ermöglicht werden.

Compliance-wahrende Finanzen

Institutionen können die Transaktionskonformität gegenüber den Aufsichtsbehörden nachweisen, ohne sensible Kundendaten in einem öffentlichen Hauptbuch offenzulegen — ein wichtiger Schritt für die Einführung von Blockchain in Institutionen.


Lieferung & Emission

Aleo's Token-Ökonomie: Angebot, Verteilung & Miner-Anteil

Aleo hat eine Gesamtversorgung von 1,5 Milliarden ALEO-Token. Das Emissionsmodell ist darauf ausgelegt, Miner in den frühen Jahren des Netzwerks stark zu belohnen — wenn die Sicherstellung der Sicherheit am kritischsten ist — mit einer schrittweisen Reduzierung im Laufe der Zeit. Die Blockbelohnung begann beim Start des Mainnets höher und verringert sich nach einem festgelegten Zeitplan, ähnlich in der Prinzipien zu einer Halbierungs-Kurve, jedoch sanfter angewendet.

Ein wichtiges Detail für Aleo-Miner: Die Blockbelohnung wird zwischen dem Prover (dem Miner, der den erfolgreichen Beweis generiert) und dem Validator (der den Block über AleoBFT finalisiert) aufgeteilt. Der Prover erhält den Großteil – ungefähr zwei Drittel der Blockbelohnung – während der Validator den Rest erhält. Beim Mining über einen Pool erhältst du den Anteil der Belohnungen des Provers proportional zu deiner geleisteten Beweisarbeit.

Im Gegensatz zu reinen PoW-Coins, bei denen alle Ausgaben an Miner gehen, teilt Aleos hybrides Modell die Belohnungen zwischen zwei Teilnehmerarten auf. Verstehen Sie diese Aufteilung, bevor Sie die erwarteten Renditen berechnen – Ihr effektives tägliches ALEO-Einkommen basiert auf dem Anteil des Provers an der Blockbelohnung, nicht auf der gesamten Blockbelohnung.

1,5 Milliarden ALEO Gesamtangebot

ALEO Token-Verteilung

Mining (Beweiser) ~500M 33%

Blockbelohnungen, die an PoSW-Miner über den Emissionszeitplan ausgezahlt werden. Die primäre Einkommensquelle für ASIC-Betreiber.

Validatoren ~250M 17%

Blockbelohnungen, die an AleoBFT-Validatoren vergeben werden, die Blöcke finalisieren. Getrennt von den Einnahmen der Miner.

Ökosystem & Stipendien ~375M 25%

Reserviert für Entwicklerstipendien, Ökosystemwachstum und Protokollentwicklung. Über die Zeit verteilt.

Investoren & Team ~375M 25%

Frühe Investoren- und Teamzuweisungen. Unterliegen langfristigen Vesting-Plänen, die mit dem Wachstum des Netzwerks abgestimmt sind.

Schlüssel für Miner

Ihr ASIC verdient nur vom Anteil der Prover — ungefähr ⅔ der angezeigten Blockbelohnung. Verwenden Sie dies bei der Modellierung des täglichen Einkommens.


Wie Aleo sich vergleicht

Aleo vs Andere abbaubare Blockchains

Aleo nimmt eine einzigartige Position im Mining-Bereich ein. Keine andere abbaubare Münze bietet private Smart Contracts oder ZK-gestützte PoW.

Faktor Aleo (ALEO) Alephium (ALPH) Bitcoin (BTC)
Beweissystem zk-SNARK (PoSW) Blake3-Hash (PoW) SHA-256-Hash (PoW)
Arten von Arbeiten Echte ZK-Beweise Hash-Berechnung Hash-Berechnung
Intelligente Verträge Ja — privat (Leo) Ja — öffentlich (Ralph) Nein
Datenschutzmodell Vollständige ZK-Privatsphäre Transparent Transparent
Konsens PoSW + AleoBFT BlockFlow PoW Nakamoto-Arbeitsnachweis
Blockzeit ~10 Sekunden ~64 Sekunden ~10 Minuten
Gesamtangebot 1,5B ALEO 1B ALPH 21 Mio. BTC
Finanzierung Über 200 Millionen USD gesammelt Selbstfinanziert Nicht zutreffend (2009)

Aleo ist die einzige Blockchain in diesem Vergleich, bei der Miner kryptographisch nützliche Arbeit leisten, die direkt das Kernprodukt des Netzwerks - private programmierbare Berechnungen - antreibt.


Zuhause vs Industrie

Aleo von zu Hause aus minen: Was Sie erwarten können

Die Eigenschaften der Aleo Mining-Hardware hängen stark von der spezifischen ASIC-Generation ab. Da die PoSW-Proof-Generierung eine andere Rechenlast als das SHA-256- oder Scrypt-Hashing darstellt, variieren die Leistungsaufnahme der ASICs stärker zwischen den Maschinentypen. Einstiegs-Aleo-ASICs, die auf Heimminer abzielen, wurden mit einer Leistungsaufnahme im Bereich von 500–1.200 W entwickelt – was mit der standardmäßigen elektrischen Infrastruktur für Privathaushalte handhabbar ist.

Der ASIC-Markt für Aleo ist jünger als der von Bitcoin oder Litecoin, was sowohl Chancen als auch Unsicherheiten für Heim-Miner schafft. Frühe Anwender, die Hardware einsetzen, während das Netzwerk noch sein ASIC-Ökosystem aufbaut, können potenziell von geringerer Schwierigkeit und einem höheren täglichen Belohnungsanteil pro Maschine profitieren – aber der Markt entwickelt sich schnell weiter und Hardware von mehreren Herstellern wird verfügbar. Überprüfen Sie unsere Produktlisten für derzeit verfügbare Aleo ASICs und deren verifizierte Hashrate-Spezifikationen.

Industrielle Waage

Positionierung im Erdgeschoss in einem mit 200 Millionen Dollar unterstützten Netzwerk

Für industrielle Betreiber bietet Aleo eine seltene Gelegenheit: den Einsatz einer signifikanten Hashrate in ein gut finanziertes, technisch glaubwürdiges Netzwerk, während das ASIC-Ökosystem noch in seinen frühen Phasen ist. Die institutionelle Unterstützung (200 Millionen Dollar Series B), die aktive Entwicklergemeinschaft für Leo-Anwendungen und der klare Anwendungsfall in der realen Welt für ZK-Privatinfrastruktur deuten alle auf eine langfristige strukturelle Nachfrage nach Nachweisberechnungen hin.

Großangelegte Aleo-Mining-Operationen profitieren von denselben Skaleneffekten wie andere ASIC-Farmen – industrielle Stromverträge, Colocation-Vereinbarungen und den Einkauf von Hardware in großen Mengen. Der entscheidende Unterschied besteht darin, dass die Arbeitslast zur Erzeugung von Nachweisen bei Aleo aus der GPU-Ära stammt, was bedeutet, dass der Vorteil von ASIC gegenüber handelsüblicher Hardware nach wie vor sehr groß ist und frühe Akteure einen unverhältnismäßig großen Anteil an Blockbelohnungen einnehmen.

Früher ASIC-Markt Über 200 Millionen US-Dollar institutionelle Unterstützung

Käuferleitfaden

Die richtige Aleo-Miner auswählen

Die Auswahl von Aleo ASIC folgt drei wichtigen Kennzahlen – mit einem wichtigen Twist, der einzigartig für die PoSW-Beweisgenerierungshardware ist.

Proof-Rate (c/s oder proof/s)

Aleo-Mining wird in Nachweisen pro Sekunde (proof/s) oder Coinbase-Puzzles pro Sekunde (c/s) gemessen, nicht in TH/s oder MH/s. Dies liegt daran, dass die Arbeitseinheit ein zk-SNARK-Nachweis ist, nicht ein Hash. Eine höhere Nachweisrate bedeutet einen größeren proportionalen Anteil an den täglichen Blockbelohnungen. Vergleichen Sie Maschinen anhand dieses Metrik anstelle von Watt allein.

Mehr Beweise = Mehr ALEO

Energieeffizienz (W/Nachweis)

Für Aleo-Miner wird die Effizienz als Watt pro Proof pro Sekunde (W/Proof) ausgedrückt. Je niedriger, desto besser – das bedeutet, dass jeder Proof, den Sie generieren, weniger Strom kostet. Mit der Reifung des ASIC-Marktes und dem Erscheinen neuer Siliziumgenerationen verbessern sich die W/Proof-Verhältnisse erheblich. Vergleichen Sie immer die Effizienz zwischen den Maschinen, nicht nur die reinen Proof-Raten.

Niedriger = Rentabler

Firmware- und Protokollunterstützung

Aleo's Protokoll hat sich seit dem Mainnet aktiv entwickelt. Im Gegensatz zu Bitcoin, dessen SHA-256-Spezifikation sich in den letzten 15 Jahren nicht geändert hat, können die PoSW-Parameter und die Puzzle-Struktur von Aleo aktualisiert werden, während sich das Protokoll weiterentwickelt. Überprüfen Sie immer, ob Ihr ASIC-Hersteller aktive Firmware-Updates und explizite Garantien für die Kompatibilität mit dem Mainnet bietet, bevor Sie einen Kauf tätigen.

Protokollkompatibilität kritisch

Die Zahlen

Verstehen der Rentabilität des Aleo-Minings

Die Rentabilität des Aleo-Minings hat im Vergleich zu anderen PoW-Münzen mehrere einzigartige Variablen – am wichtigsten ist die Aufteilung der Belohnungen zwischen Prover und Validator sowie die sich entwickelnde Natur der Schwierigkeit des PoSW-Rätsels.

01

ALEO Preis (USD)

ALEO ist ein kürzlich gestarteter Mainnet-Token und weist eine höhere Preisvolatilität auf als etabliertere Mining-Coins. Tokens in der frühen Phase können große Preisschwankungen in beide Richtungen erleben, die durch Listungsereignisse, Neuigkeiten aus dem Ökosystem und breitere Marktbedingungen ausgelöst werden. Miner, die profitabel bei ALEO-Preisen von 50–60 % unter ihrer Berechnung zum Kaufdatum operieren können, befinden sich in der stärksten Position. Das Halten von ALEO, das während Niedrigpreisphasen angesammelt wurde, ist eine gängige Strategie für Miner mit langfristigem Vertrauen in die ZK-Privatinfrastruktur-These.

02

Der Prover Share — Ihr tatsächlicher Anteil

Im Gegensatz zu reinen PoW-Münzen, bei denen 100 % der Blockbelohnung an den Miner gehen, teilt Aleo die Belohnungen zwischen Prover (Minern) und Validatoren. Der Anteil der Prover beträgt ungefähr zwei Drittel der Blockbelohnung. Das bedeutet, wenn eine Blockbelohnung als ~23 ALEO angezeigt wird, beträgt Ihr effektives Einkommen als Miner ungefähr 15–16 ALEO pro Block, der von Ihrem Pool gefunden wird. Verwenden Sie immer die Zahl des Prover-Anteils — nicht die Brutto-Blockbelohnung — bei der Berechnung des täglichen Einkommens und der Rendite.

03

Netzwerkbeweis Schwierigkeit

Aleo's PoSW-Puzzle-Schwierigkeit passt sich an, um konsistente Blockzeiten zu erreichen, während mehr Hardware zur Erzeugung von Nachweisen online geht. Da der ASIC-Markt für Aleo wächst – und er wächst schnell nach dem Mainnet – wird die Schwierigkeit zunehmen und der proportionale Anteil der Belohnungen für jede Maschine wird abnehmen. Dies ist die gleiche Entwicklung wie bei jedem PoW-Netzwerk, das von CPU/GPU zu ASIC-Dominanz übergeht, jedoch in einem kürzeren Zeitraum, da die ASIC-Entwicklung nahe dem Mainnet begann. Modellieren Sie die Schwierigkeit konservativ.

04

Stromkosten & Nachweis der Effizienz

Die Leistungsaufnahme von Aleo ASICs reicht von etwa 500W bis über 3.000W, abhängig von der Einheit. Da die Arbeitslast (zk-SNARK-Beweisgenerierung) rechnerisch komplexer ist als das SHA-256-Hashing, sind ASICs der frühen Generation tendenziell weniger energieeffizient als Bitcoin-Miner der entsprechenden Generation. Diese Lücke verringert sich mit jeder nachfolgenden ASIC-Generation. Berechnen Sie Ihre gesamten täglichen Stromkosten und ziehen Sie diese von den Brutto-ALEO-Einnahmen (Prover-Anteil) ab, um Ihren Nettogewinn pro Tag zu erhalten.

05

Blockbelohnungs-Emissionsplan

Die Blockbelohnung von Aleo verringert sich im Laufe der Zeit nach einem festgelegten Zeitplan. Die Emissionskurve belohnt die Miner in den frühen Jahren, um die Netzwerksicherheit zu stärken – das bedeutet, dass Miner, die jetzt aktiv sind, sich in der Phase mit den höchsten Belohnungen in der Emissionsgeschichte von Aleo befinden. Da die Belohnungen in den folgenden Jahren sinken, wird das Einkommen der Miner zunehmend von den Transaktionsgebühren aus Leo-Anwendungen und dem Preis des ALEO-Tokens abhängen. Diese vorgezogene Emission ist ein Argument für einen frühen Einsatz – und dafür, zu verstehen, dass die heutigen Blockbelohnungszahlen höher sind, als sie in 3–5 Jahren sein werden.


Poolauswahl

Beste Aleo Mining-Pools

Aleo-Pool-Software muss das PoSW-Nachweisübermittlungsprotokoll unterstützen – das strukturell anders ist als ein standardmäßiger Stratum-Endpunkt, der von SHA-256- oder Scrypt-Miner verwendet wird. Überprüfen Sie immer, ob Ihr gewählter Pool native Aleo PoSW-Unterstützung und eine aktive, gewartete Integration mit der Aleo-Mainnet-Knoten-Software hat, bevor Sie Hardware anschließen.

Da das Aleo-Mainnet relativ neu ist, ist das Pool-Ökosystem kleiner als das von Bitcoin oder Litecoin, wächst jedoch schnell. Größere Pools bieten konsistentere tägliche Auszahlungen. Kleinere Pools bieten eine höhere Varianz, aber manchmal niedrigere Gebühren. Für die meisten ASIC-Betreiber ist ein Top-3-Pool nach Hashrate die sinnvolle Standardwahl für Einkommensstabilität.

Aleo Pool (HiveOn) 1% PPLNS

Einer der größten Aleo-Pools nach Hashrate. Zuverlässige Infrastruktur, native PoSW-Unterstützung, tägliche Auszahlungen, klares Dashboard für Einnahmen von Prover/Validator.

Miningpool.center 1% PPS+

PPS+ Modus für Null-Varianz ALEO-Auszahlungen. Gute Wahl für Betreiber, die ein vorhersehbares tägliches Einkommen benötigen. Native Unterstützung des Aleo-Hauptnetzwerks.

2Miners 1% PPLNS

Etablierter Multi-Coin-Pool mit wachsender Aleo-Präsenz. Vertrauenswürdige Infrastruktur, saubere Auszahlungshistorie, europäische Serverabdeckung.

Flexpool 0.5% PPLNS

Niedrigere Gebührenoption mit nativer Aleo-Unterstützung. Aktives Entwicklungsteam, transparente Gebührenstruktur, guter Ruf in der Community aus der ETH-Ära.

Community Pool (Aleo Network) 0% PPLNS

Nullgebühren-Community-gesteuertes Pool. Kleiner, aber ideologisch mit Aleos Dezentralisierungsmission ausgerichtet. Am besten für Miner, die auch die Netzwerkintegrität unterstützen möchten.


Achtung

Häufige Fehler beim Aleo Mining

Aleo's neuartige Architektur schafft Fallstricke, die für ZK-Proof-Mining einzigartig sind. Vermeiden Sie diese, bevor Sie investieren.

Verwendung der vollständigen Blockbelohnung in ROI-Berechnungen

Der häufigste Fehler beim Aleo-Mining. Die angezeigte Blockbelohnung umfasst sowohl den Anteil des Provers (Miners) als auch den Anteil des Validators. Ihr ASIC verdient nur den Anteil des Provers – ungefähr zwei Drittel der Bruttozahl. Die Verwendung der vollen Blockbelohnung in Ihrem Rentabilitätsrechner wird Ihr erwartetes tägliches Einkommen um etwa 50 % überbewerten. Bestätigen Sie immer den aktuellen Prozentsatz des Prover-Anteils in der offiziellen Dokumentation von Aleo, bevor Sie die Renditen modellieren.

Hardware kaufen ohne Bestätigung der Protokollkompatibilität

Aleo's PoSW-Spezifikation unterscheidet sich von anderen Mining-Algorithmen. Generische "ASIC-Miner", die Blake3 oder andere Kompatibilität behaupten, sind keine Aleo-Miner. Nur Hardware, die speziell für die PoSW-Beweisgenerierung von Aleo entworfen und getestet wurde, wird eine bedeutende Hashrate im Aleo-Netzwerk erzeugen. Überprüfen Sie die explizite Kompatibilität mit dem Aleo-Mainnet beim Hersteller, bevor Sie einen Kauf tätigen.

Die schnell wachsende ASIC-Ökosystem ignorieren

Aleo-Hauptnetz ist neu und ASIC-Hardware von mehreren Herstellern kommt in schneller Folge auf den Markt. Die Schwierigkeit wächst schnell. Miner, die ihre ROI-Prognosen auf der heutigen Schwierigkeit basieren, ohne ein Wachstum von 2–3× im nächsten Jahr zu berücksichtigen, werden feststellen, dass ihre realen Renditen deutlich unter den Erwartungen liegen. Modellieren Sie aggressiv pessimistische Schwierigkeitsszenarien.

Verwirrung zwischen Proof-Rate und Hashrate

Die Leistung von Aleo wird in Nachweisen pro Sekunde (c/s) gemessen, nicht in TH/s oder MH/s. Diese Einheiten sind nicht mit anderen Mining-Algorithmen vergleichbar. Versuchen Sie nicht, die "Hashrate" eines Aleo-Miners direkt mit der eines Bitcoin- oder Kaspa-Miners zu vergleichen. Verwenden Sie spezifische Rentabilitätsrechner für ALEO, die die Nachweisrate und die aktuelle Netzwerk-Schwierigkeit als Eingaben verwenden.

Überspringen der Überwachung von Firmware-Updates

Aleo's Protokoll wird aktiv nach dem Hauptnetz entwickelt. PoSW-Parameter und Puzzle-Strukturen können durch Netzwerk-Upgrades aktualisiert werden. Ein Aleo ASIC mit veralteter Firmware kann ungültige Nachweise erzeugen, auf dem falschen Chain-Fork minen oder die Verbindung zur aktualisierten Pool-Software verlieren. Überwachen Sie die Kanäle des Herstellers und wenden Sie Updates umgehend an.

Überblick über die Rolle des Validators vs. Provers

Einige Aleo-Teilnehmer fungieren als Validatoren (die Blöcke über AleoBFT finalisieren) anstatt als Prover (Miner). Diese Rollen haben unterschiedliche Hardwareanforderungen und unterschiedliche Belohnungsstrukturen. ASIC-Miner sind Prover. Verwechseln Sie die Pool-Dokumentation über Validatorenbelohnungen nicht mit Ihrem tatsächlichen Miner-Einkommen — sie sind separate Teilnehmer im AleoBFT-System.


Häufig gestellte Fragen (FAQ)

Aleo Mining – Häufig gestellte Fragen

Alles, was Sie wissen müssen, bevor Sie Ihren ersten Aleo ASIC-Miner kaufen.

'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.

Bereit, mit dem Mining von Aleo zu beginnen?

Durchsuchen Sie unser vollständiges Sortiment an Aleo PoSW ASIC-Minern oben. Das ZK-Mining-Ökosystem befindet sich in seinen frühesten Phasen – Positionen, die jetzt eingerichtet werden, bieten das höchste Potenzial für das Verhältnis von Belohnung zu Schwierigkeit in der Emissionsgeschichte von Aleo. Unser Team hilft Ihnen, die richtige Maschine für Ihre Stromversorgung und Ihre Investitionsziele zu finden.