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.
s Werelds Eerste ZK-Proof Blockchain — Nu Mijnbaar met ASIC
Aleo is anders dan elke andere minebare blockchain. Gebouwd vanaf de grond op basis van zero-knowledge bewijzen, gebruikt Aleo zijn proof-of-work consensus niet alleen om het netwerk te beveiligen — maar ook om de cryptografische bewijzen te genereren die privé, programmeerbare slimme contracten mogelijk maken. Mijnwerkers op Aleo doen niet zomaar willekeurige data hashen: ze voeren het computationeel intensieve werk uit van zk-SNARK bewijsgeneratie die de privacy-bewarende toepassingen van Aleo mogelijk maakt. Dit is een fundamenteel nieuwe categorie van mining, met langdurige structurele vraag gedreven door echte berekeningen.
Overeenkomst
AleoBFT
PoW + BFT hybride
Blokbeloning
~80.6702 ALEO
Bewijs Systeem
zkSNARK
zk-SNARK-gebaseerde PoW
Bloktijd
~6 sec
Aleo Tijdlijn
Van Zero-Knowledge Onderzoek naar Mineerbare Mainnet
2019Aleo opgericht
Howard Wu en zijn team vonden Aleo Systems. Onderzoek wordt uitgevoerd naar het toepassen van zk-SNARKs op een volledig programmeerbare blockchain — niet slechts een enkele toepassing.
2020Whitepaper & Leo
Aleo publiceert zijn technische visie. De ontwikkeling van Leo — een programmeertaal op hoog niveau voor het schrijven van ZK-toepassingen — gaat publiekelijk van start.
2021Testnet I & II
Public testnets worden gelanceerd. Tienduizenden mijnwerkers doen mee aan het testen van het PoSW (Proof of Succinct Work) mijnmechanisme met GPU-hardware.
2022Serie B Financiering
Aleo haalt $200 miljoen op in Serie B. Investering bevestigt de ZK-proof applicatielaag-these op institutioneel schaal.
2023Testnet III & ASIC Push
Uitgebreide testnet-fase. First ASIC-fabrikanten beginnen met de ontwikkeling van speciale PoSW-hardware gericht op de zk-proof rekenbelasting van Aleo.
2024Mainnet Lancering
Aleo mainnet gaat live. ASIC-miners van Bitmain en andere fabrikanten beginnen met de productie-implementatie op het live netwerk.
Technologie & Visie
Waarom Aleo een nieuw paradigma in Proof-of-Work-mining vertegenwoordigt
Elke andere proof-of-work blockchain gebruikt mijnbouw als beveiligingsmechanisme — mijnwerkers concurreren om een hash-oplossing te vinden die voldoet aan het moeilijkheidsgraaddoel van het netwerk, het werk is willekeurig, en de enige output is blokbeveiliging. Aleo is categorisch anders. Op Aleo is het "werk" in proof-of-work het genereren van zero-knowledge beknopte niet-interactievere argumenten van kennis — zk-SNARKs — die daadwerkelijk door het netwerk worden verbruikt om privé, programmeerbare slimme contracten mogelijk te maken.
Dit betekent dat Aleo-miners geen elektriciteit verspillen aan zinloze hash-berekeningen. Ze voeren echte cryptografische berekeningen uit die echte nuttigheid hebben: bewijzen dat privétransacties en toepassingsstatus-overgangen geldig zijn zonder hun inhoud prijs te geven. Naarmate het Aleo-ecosysteem groeit en meer toepassingen worden ingezet, wordt de vraag naar bewijscreatie — en dus naar mijnhardware — ondersteund door een structurele impuls die Bitcoin-mijnbouw in wezen ontbreekt.
Voor mijnbouwers is deze theses overtuigend: je speculeert niet alleen op de prijs van een munt, maar neemt deel aan de infrastructuurlaag van een privacybeschermende programmeerbare blockchain die meer dan $200 miljoen heeft opgehaald bij institutionele beleggers en grote durfkapitaalfirma's tot haar backers rekent.
Het Mijnmechanisme
Bewijs van Bondig Werk (PoSW): Minen die Echt Werk Verzetten
Aleo's PoSW consensus is de meest technisch innovatieve mijnbouwmechanisme dat momenteel in productie is. Hier is hoe het werkt — en waarom het belangrijk is voor jouw investeringshypothese.
Wat is een zk-SNARK?
Een Zero-Knowledge Succinct Non-Interactive Argument of Knowledge is een cryptografisch bewijs dat het ene stuk (de bewijzer) in staat stelt een ander stuk (de verifier) ervan te overtuigen dat een verklaring waar is — zonder enige informatie prijs te geven over waarom het waar is. In eenvoudige bewoordingen: je kunt bewijzen dat je een geheim weet, of dat een transactie geldig is, zonder het geheim of de transactiegegevens prijs te geven. Dit is de wiskundige basis die het mogelijk maakt voor Aleo's private slimme contracten.
Hoe PoSW zk-SNARKs gebruikt voor mijnbouw
In Aleo's Proof of Succinct Work concurreren miners om een geldige zk-SNARK bewijs te genereren voor de huidige blokpuzzel. De puzzel is een computationeel probleem waarvan de oplossing echte bewijsgeneratie-work vereist — niet willekeurig SHA-hashing. De eerste miner die een geldig bewijs produceert dat voldoet aan het moeilijkheidspunt van het netwerk, wint de blokbeloning. Het bewijs wordt vervolgens op de blockchain opgeslagen en kan door elk knooppunt binnen milliseconden worden geverifieerd.
AleoBFT: De Hybride Consensus Laag
Aleo gebruikt een hybride consensus genaamd AleoBFT, dat PoSW-mining combineert met een Byzantijnse fouttolerante finaliteitslaag. Mijnwerkers produceren blokken via PoSW-bewijzing. Valideerders (een aparte rol) finaliseren vervolgens deze blokken met behulp van BFT-consensus, waardoor snelle deterministische finaliteit wordt geboden zonder afbreuk te doen aan het gedecentraliseerde beveiligingsmodel van proof-of-work. Dit hybride ontwerp maakt het mogelijk dat Aleo ~10 seconden bloktijden heeft, naast cryptografische finaliteit.
Hoe Aleo PoSW Mining werkt — Stap voor stap
01
Raadspel Uitzending
Het netwerk zendt de huidige blokpuzzel uit — een zk-SNARK bewijs generatieprobleem afgeleid van de vorige blokheader en de huidige epochparameters. Alle miners ontvangen tegelijkertijd dezelfde puzzel.
02
Bewijsgeneratierace
Je ASIC voert de computationeel intensieve taak uit van het genereren van kandidaat zk-SNARK bewijzen. Dit is geen hashing van willekeurige gegevens — het is echte cryptografische bewijsberekening. De hardware die geoptimaliseerd is voor deze werkbelasting (PoSW ASICs) kan bewijzen genereren vele malen sneller dan CPU's of GPU's.
03
Moeilijkheidsgraad Doel Gehaald
Wanneer je gegenereerde bewijs voldoet aan het huidige moeilijkheidsgraaddoel van het netwerk — wat betekent dat het de vereiste eigenschappen heeft die door de puzzel worden gedefinieerd — heeft jouw mijnwerker een geldige blokoplossing gevonden. Het bewijs wordt onmiddellijk naar het netwerk gestuurd.
04
BFT afronding & Beloning
Validators controleren het ingediende bewijs (verificatie is bijna onmiddellijk voor zk-SNARKs) en finaliseren het blok via AleoBFT. De blokbeloning wordt verdeeld onder de winnende mijnwerker. ALEO-tokens komen op je zelf-bewarende wallet volgens het uitbetalingsschema van je minerspool.
Het Ecosysteem
Leo, Private DeFi, en waarom vraag naar toepassingen belangrijk is voor miners
Aleo's Leo programmeertaal is een op Rust geïnspireerde high-level taal die speciaal is ontworpen voor het schrijven van zero-knowledge-toepassingen. Ontwikkelaars schrijven Leo-programma's die worden gecompileerd naar zk-SNARK-circuits, waardoor volledig private slimme contracten mogelijk zijn, waarbij zowel de invoer als de uitvoer van een berekening vertrouwelijk kunnen worden gehouden — iets wat onmogelijk is op Ethereum of een andere transparante blockchain.
Voor miners is het applicatie-ecosysteem van belang omdat het aanhoudende vraag naar bewijsvoering creëert, los van alleen blokbeloningen. Naarmate meer Leo-toepassingen live gaan — privé DeFi-protocollen, vertrouwelijke stemsystemen, identiteitsverificatiehulpmiddelen, compliance-bevorderende financiële infrastructuur — groeit de behoefte van het netwerk aan bewijsberekeningen. Dit verschilt structureel van Bitcoin-mining, waar de enige drijfveer voor het langetermijninkomen van miners de blokbeloning en transactiekosten zijn.
De visie van Aleo op "programmeerbare privacy" — waarbij elke toepassing kan draaien met zero-knowledge garanties — positioneert het als kritieke infrastructuur voor de volgende golf van blockchain-acceptatie in gereguleerde sectoren: financiën, gezondheidszorg, overheid en identiteit. Deze institutionele vraagstelling is de reden waarom Aleo vóór de mainnet meer dan $200 miljoen aan financiering heeft aangetrokken.
Wat wordt gebouwd op Aleo
Privé DeFi
AMMs en leenprotocols waarbij handelsgrootte en portefeuillebalansen vertrouwelijk blijven. Voorkomt front-running en MEV-exploitatie op protocolniveau.
Vertrouwelijke stemming
On-chain governance en verkiezingen waarbij individuele stemmen privé zijn, maar het totale resultaat publiekelijk verifieerbaar — mathematisch gegarandeerd.
ZK Identiteit & KYC
Bewijs dat u aan de nalevingsvereisten voldoet (leeftijd, jurisdictie, accreditering) zonder uw identiteitsdocumenten te onthullen aan een tegenpartij of de blockchain.
Privé NFT's & Spelletjes
In-game bezittingen en verzamelobjecten waarvan het eigendom bewijsbaar is maar niet openbaar zichtbaar — voor het mogelijk maken van verborgen-informatie spelmechanismen op de blockchain.
Nalevingsvriendelijke financiering
Instellingen kunnen de naleving van transacties aan toezichthouders bewijzen zonder gevoelige klantgegevens op een openbaar grootboek bloot te stellen — een belangrijke doorbraak voor de adoptie van blockchain door instellingen.
Aanvoer & Emissie
Aleo's Token Economie: Aanbod, Distributie & Aandeel van Mijnwerkers
Aleo heeft een totale voorraad van 1,5 miljard ALEO-tokens. Het emissiemodel is ontworpen om mijnwerkers in de eerste jaren van het netwerk flink te belonen — wanneer het opbouwen van beveiliging het meest kritisch is — met een geleidelijke vermindering in de loop van de tijd. De blokbeloning was bij de lancering van het mainnet hoger en neemt af volgens een schema, vergelijkbaar met een halveringscurve, maar toegepast op een soepelere manier.
Een belangrijk detail voor Aleo-miners: de blokbeloning wordt verdeeld tussen de bewijsleverancier (de mijnwerker die het winnende bewijs genereert) en de validator (die het blok finaliseert via AleoBFT). De bewijsleverancier ontvangt het grootste deel — ongeveer twee derde van de blokbeloning — terwijl de validator de rest ontvangt. Bij mining via een pool krijg je het aandeel van de bewijsleverancier in de beloningen, proportioneel aan je bijgedragen bewijswerk.
In tegenstelling tot pure PoW-munten waar alle uitgifte naar mijnwerkers gaat, deelt het hybride model van Aleo de beloningen tussen twee typen deelnemers. Begrijp deze verdeling voordat je de verwachte rendementen berekent — je effectieve dagelijkse ALEO-inkomsten zijn gebaseerd op het aandeel van de bewijzen in de blokkadeilingen, niet op het volledige blokkadeilingsbedrag.
1,5 miljard ALEO totaal aanbod
ALEO Token Distributie
Mijnbouw (Bewijzen)~500M33%
(blok)beloningen betaald aan PoSW-miners volgens het emissieschema. De belangrijkste inkomstenbron voor ASIC-operators.
Valideerders~250M17%
Blockbeloningen toegewezen aan AleoBFT-validaties die blokken finaliseren. Afzonderlijk van mijnwinsten.
Ecosysteem & Subsidies~375M25%
Gereserveerd voor ontwikkelaarsbeurzen, ecosysteemgroei en protocolontwikkeling. Gevestigd over een periode.
Investeerders & Team~375M25%
Vroege investeringen en teamtoewijzingen. Onderworpen aan langetermijnvesting schema's die in lijn zijn met de netwerk groei.
Sleutel voor mijnwerkers
Je ASIC verdient alleen uit het aandeel van de Provers — ongeveer ⅔ van de weergegeven blokbeloning. Gebruik dit bij het modelleren van het dagelijkse inkomen.
Hoe Aleo zich verhoudt
Aleo vs Andere Mijnbare Blockchains
Aleo neemt een unieke positie in binnen het mijnbouwlandschap. Geen enkele andere mijnbare munt biedt privé slimcontracten of ZK-proof-gebaseerde PoW.
Aleo is de enige blockchain in deze vergelijking waar miners cryptografisch nuttig werk verrichten dat direct de kernproducten van het netwerk aandrijft — private programmeerbare berekeningen.
Thuis versus industrieel
Mijn Aleo thuis: Wat te verwachten
De hardwarekenmerken van Aleo-mining hangen sterk af van de specifieke ASIC-generatie. Omdat het genereren van PoSW-bewijzen een andere computationele belasting is dan SHA-256 of Scrypt-hashing, variëren de stroomverbruik van ASIC's meer tussen verschillende machine-typen. Instap-ASIC's voor Aleo die gericht zijn op thuismijnwerkers, zijn ontwikkeld met een stroomverbruik van 500–1.200W — haalbaar met standaard elektrische infrastructuur in huis.
De ASIC-markt voor Aleo is jonger dan Bitcoin of Litecoin, wat zowel kansen als onzekerheid creëert voor thuisminners. Vroege adopters die hardware inzetten terwijl het netwerk nog bezig is met het opzetten van zijn ASIC-ecosysteem, kunnen mogelijk profiteren van lagere moeilijkheid en een hoger aandeel van de dagelijkse beloningen per machine — maar de markt ontwikkelt zich snel en hardware van meerdere fabrikanten wordt beschikbaar. Bekijk onze productlijsten voor momenteel beschikbare Aleo ASICs en hun geverifieerde hashrate-specificaties.
Industriële schaal
Begane grond positionering in een netwerk gesteund door 200 miljoen dollar
Voor industriële operators biedt Aleo een zeldzame kans: het inzetten van significante hashrate in een goed gefinancierd, technisch geloofwaardig netwerk terwijl het ASIC-ecosysteem zich nog in de vroege stadia bevindt. De institutionele steun ($200M Series B), de actieve Leo-applicatieontwikkelaarsgemeenschap en de duidelijke praktische gebruikstoepassing voor ZK-privacy-infrastructuur wijzen allemaal op een langdurige structurele vraag naar bewijsberekeningen.
Grootschalige Aleo-miningactiviteiten profiteren van dezelfde economieën als andere ASIC-boerderijen — industriële stroomcontracten, colocatieovereenkomsten en groothandel in hardware. Het belangrijkste verschil is dat de werkbelasting voor het genereren van bewijzen van Aleo uit het GPU-tijdperk komt, wat betekent dat het voordeel van ASIC ten opzichte van commodity hardware nog steeds zeer groot is en vroege adoptanten een onevenredig deel van de blokbeloningen binnenhalen.
Aleo ASIC-selectie volgt drie belangrijke metrics — met één belangrijke twist die uniek is voor PoSW-gegevensgeneratie hardware.
bewijspercentage (c/s of bewijs/en)
Aleo-mijnbouw wordt gemeten in bewijzen per seconde (proof/sec) of coinbase-puzzels per seconde (c/sec), niet in TH/sec of MH/sec. Dit komt doordat de werk-eenheid een zk-SNARK-bewijs is, niet een hash. Een hogere bewijs-snelheid betekent een grotere proportionele bijdrage in de dagelijkse blokbeloningen. Vergelijk machines op deze maatstaf in plaats van alleen op wattage.
Meer bewijzen = Meer ALEO
Energie-efficiëntie (W/bewijs)
Voor Aleo-miners wordt efficiëntie uitgedrukt in watt per bewijs per seconde (W/bewijs). Hoe lager, hoe beter — het betekent dat elk bewijs dat je genereert minder elektriciteit kost. Naarmate de ASIC-markt volwassen wordt en nieuwere silicongenereerden verschijnen, verbeteren de W/bewijs-verhoudingen aanzienlijk. Vergelijk altijd de efficiëntie tussen verschillende machines, niet alleen de ruwe bewijspercentages.
Lager = Win meer op
Firmware- en protocolondersteuning
Het protocol van Aleo ontwikkelt zich actief sinds de mainnet. In tegenstelling tot Bitcoin, waar de SHA-256 specificatie al 15 jaar niet is gewijzigd, kunnen de PoSW-parameters en puzzelstructuur van Aleo worden bijgewerkt naarmate het protocol zich verder ontwikkelt. Controleer altijd of uw ASIC-fabrikant actieve firmware-updates biedt en expliciete garanties voor mainnet-compatibiliteit voordat u een aankoop doet.
Protocolcompatibiliteit kritisch
De cijfers
Begrip krijgen van de winstgevendheid van Aleo-mining
De winstgevendheid van Aleo-mining heeft verschillende unieke variabelen in vergelijking met andere PoW-munten — vooral de verdeling van de beloning tussen de bewijsnummeraar/validator en de evoluerende aard van de moeilijkheidsgraad van de PoSW-puzzel.
01
ALEO Prijs (USD)
ALEO is een onlangs gelanceerde mainnet-token en vertoont een hogere prijsschommelingen dan meer gevestigde mijnbouwmunten. Tokens in de vroege fase kunnen grote prijsfluctuaties in beide richtingen ervaren, gedreven door listing-evenementen, ecosysteembijdragen en bredere marktomstandigheden. Mijnbouwers die winstgevend kunnen opereren bij ALEO-prijzen die 50–60% lager liggen dan hun aankoopdatumcalculatie, bevinden zich in de sterkste positie. Het vasthouden van ALEO die tijdens perioden van lage prijzen is opgespaard, is een gangbare strategie voor mijnbouwers met een langetermijn overtuiging in de ZK-privacy-infrastructuurtheorie.
02
De Prover Share — Jouw Werkelijke Aandeel
In tegenstelling tot pure PoW-munten, waar 100% van de blokbeloning naar de miner gaat, splitst Aleo de beloningen tussen provers (miners) en validators. Het aandeel van de prover is ongeveer twee derde van de blokbeloning. Dit betekent dat als een blokbeloning wordt weergegeven als ~23 ALEO, je effectieve verdiensten als miner ongeveer 15–16 ALEO per blok dat door jouw pool is gevonden, zijn. Gebruik altijd het cijfer voor het prover-aandeel — niet de bruto blokbeloning — bij het berekenen van het dagelijkse inkomen en ROI.
03
Netwerk Bewijs Moeilijkheid
De moeilijkheidsgraad van Aleo's PoSW-puzzel past zich aan om consistente bloktijden te bereiken naarmate er meer hardware voor bewijzen-generatie online komt. Naarmate de ASIC-markt voor Aleo groeit — en dat gebeurt snel na de mainnet — zal de moeilijkheid toenemen en zal het proportionele aandeel van beloningen voor elke machine afnemen. Dit is dezelfde traject als elk PoW-netwerk dat overgaat van CPU/GPU- naar ASIC-dominantie, maar ingekort in een kortere periode omdat de ontwikkeling van ASIC dicht bij de mainnet begon. Model de moeilijkheidsgraad voorzichtig.
04
Elektriciteitskosten & Bewijseffectiviteit
Het stroomverbruik van Aleo ASIC's varieert van ongeveer 500W tot meer dan 3.000W, afhankelijk van het apparaat. Omdat de werklast (zk-SNARK bewijs generatie) computationeel complexer is dan SHA-256 hashing, zijn ASIC's uit de vroege generatie over het algemeen minder energie-efficiënt dan gelijkwaardige Bitcoin-miners. Deze kloof wordt kleiner naarmate elke volgende ASIC-generatie verschijnt. Bereken je totale dagelijkse energie-kosten en trek deze af van je bruto ALEO-inkomsten (proeverdeling) om je netto dagelijkse winst te krijgen.
05
Blockbeloning emissieschema
Aleo's blokbeloning neemt in de loop van de tijd af volgens een planning. De emissiecurve legt de beloningen in de vroege jaren vast om de netwerkbeveiliging te stimuleren — wat betekent dat mijnwerkers die nu inzetten zich bevinden in de fase met de hoogste beloning in de emissiegeschiedenis van Aleo. Naarmate de beloningen in de daaropvolgende jaren afnemen, zal het inkomen van mijnwerkers steeds meer afhankelijk worden van transactiekosten van Leo-toepassingen en de prijs van de ALEO-token. Deze emissievoetingsstrategie is een reden voor vroege inzet — en voor het begrip dat de huidige blokbeloningscijfers hoger zijn dan ze over 3–5 jaar zullen zijn.
Poolselectie
Beste Aleo Mining Pools
Aleo pool software moet het PoSW-proofsubmit-protocol ondersteunen — dat structureel anders is dan een standaard Stratum-eindpunt dat wordt gebruikt door SHA-256 of Scrypt-miners. Controleer altijd of jouw gekozen pool native Aleo PoSW-ondersteuning heeft en een actieve, onderhouden integratie met de Aleo mainnet knooppuntsoftware voordat je hardware aansluit.
Omdat Aleo mainnet relatief nieuw is, is het pool-ecosysteem kleiner dan dat van Bitcoin of Litecoin, maar het groeit snel. Grotere pools bieden meer consistente dagelijkse uitbetalingen. Kleinere pools geven een hogere variatie maar soms lagere kosten. Voor de meeste ASIC-beheerders is een top-3 pool op basis van hashrate de verstandige standaardkeuze voor inkomstenstabiliteit.
Aleo Pool (HiveOn)1%PPLNS
Een van de grootste Aleo-pools qua hashrate. Betrouwbare infrastructuur, native PoSW-ondersteuning, dagelijkse uitbetalingen, duidelijk dashboard voor opbrengsten van proefleiders/testers.
Miningpool.center1%PPS+
PPS+ modus voor ALEO-uitbetalingen met nul-variantie. Goede keuze voor operators die voorspelbaar dagelijks inkomen nodig hebben. Natuurlijke Aleo mainnet-ondersteuning.
2Miners1%PPLNS
Gevestigde multi-coin pool met toenemende Aleo-aanwezigheid. Vertrouwde infrastructuur, zuivere uitbetalingsgeschiedenis, Europese serverdekking.
Flexpool0.5%PPLNS
Lagere vergoeding-optie met native Aleo-ondersteuning. Actief ontwikkelingsteam, transparante vergoedingstructuur, goede gemeenschapsreputatie uit de ETH-periode.
Community Pool (Aleo Network)0%PPLNS
Zero-kosten gemeenschapsgestuurde pool. Kleiner, maar ideologisch afgestemd op Aleo's decentralisatie missie. Het beste voor miners die ook het netwerkgezondheid willen ondersteunen.
Pas op
Veelvoorkomende fouten bij Aleo-mijnbouw
De nieuwe architectuur van Aleo creëert valkuilen die uniek zijn voor ZK-proof mining. Vermijd deze vóórdat u investeert.
Het gebruik van de Volledige Blokbeloning in ROI-berekeningen
De meest voorkomende fout bij Aleo-mining. De weergegeven blokbeloning dekt zowel het aandeel van de beweerder (mijnwerker) als dat van de validator. Je ASIC verdient alleen het deel van de beweerder — ongeveer twee derde van het bruto-bedrag. Het gebruik van de volledige blokbeloning in je winstgevendheidsrekenmachine zal je verwachte dagelijkse inkomen met ongeveer 50% overschatten. Controleer altijd het actuele percentage van het aandeel van de beweerder in de officiële documentatie van Aleo voordat je rendementen modelleert.
Hardware kopen zonder bevestiging van protocolcompatibiliteit
De PoSW-specificatie van Aleo verschilt van die van andere mijnbouwalgoritmen. Algemene "ASIC-miners" die beweren compatibel te zijn met Blake3 of andere algoritmen, zijn geen Aleo-miners. Alleen hardware die specifiek is ontworpen en getest voor het genereren van Aleo's PoSW-beweising, zal een betekenisvolle hash-rate opleveren op het Aleo-netwerk. Controleer de expliciete compatibiliteit met het Aleo-mainnet bij de fabrikant voordat u koopt.
De Lage Eggie van de Snelle Groeiende ASIC-ecosysteem
Aleo mainnet is nieuw en ASIC-hardware van meerdere fabrikanten komt snel op de markt. De moeilijkheidsgraad groeit snel. Miners die hun ROI-prognoses baseren op de huidige moeilijkheid zonder rekening te houden met een groei van 2-3× in het komende jaar, zullen merken dat hun reële rendementen aanzienlijk onder de verwachtingen blijven. Modelleer agressief pessimistische moeilijkheidsscenario's.
Verwarren van bewijscijfers met hashrate
Aleo-prestaties worden gemeten in bewijzen per seconde (c/s), niet in TH/s of MH/s. Deze eenheden zijn niet vergelijkbaar met andere mijnalgoritmen. Probeer de "hashrate" van een Aleo-mijnwerker niet rechtstreeks te vergelijken met die van een Bitcoin- of Kaspa-mijnwerker. Gebruik ALEO-specifieke winstgevendheidscalculators die het bewijspercentage en de huidige netwerkkracht als invoer gebruiken.
Overslaan van Firmware-updatebewaking
Het protocol van Aleo wordt actief ontwikkeld na de mainnet. PoSW-parameters en puzzelstructuren kunnen worden bijgewerkt via netwerkupgrades. Een Aleo ASIC met verouderde firmware kan ongeldige bewijzen produceren, minen op de verkeerde ketenvertakking, of niet kunnen verbinden met bijgewerkte poolsoftware. Houd kanalen van de fabrikant in de gaten en voer updates tijdig uit.
Overzicht van de Rol van Validator versus Prover
Sommige Aleo-participanten functioneren als validators (die blokken finaliseren via AleoBFT) in plaats van als provers (miners). Deze rollen hebben verschillende hardware-eisen en verschillende beloningsstructuren. ASIC-miners zijn provers. Verwarr nooit pooldocumentatie over validator-beloningen met je daadwerkelijke miner-inkomen — het zijn aparte deelnemers in het AleoBFT-systeem.
Veelgestelde vragen
Aleo Mining FAQ
Alles wat je moet weten voordat je je eerste Aleo ASIC-miner koopt.
'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.
Klaar om te beginnen met het minen van Aleo?
Blader door ons volledige assortiment Aleo PoSW ASIC-miners hierboven. Het ZK-mining-ecosysteem bevindt zich in de vroegste fase — posities die nu worden ingenomen, bieden de hoogste potentiële belonings-naar- moeilijkheidsgraad verhouding in de uitgiftegeschiedenis van Aleo. Ons team helpt u de juiste machine te vinden voor uw stroomvoorziening en investeringsdoelen.