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.
A primeira blockchain do mundo com ZK-Proof — Agora mineável por ASIC
Aleo é diferente de qualquer outra blockchain mineável. Construída do zero com base em provas de conhecimento zero, a Aleo usa seu consenso de proof-of-work não apenas para proteger a rede — mas para gerar realmente as provas criptográficas que alimentam contratos inteligentes privados e programáveis. Os mineradores na Aleo não estão simplesmente hashing dados arbitrários: eles estão realizando o trabalho computacionalmente intensivo de geração de provas zk-SNARK que tornam possíveis as aplicações de privacidade preservada da Aleo. Esta é uma categoria fundamentalmente nova de mineração com uma demanda estrutural de longo prazo impulsionada por computação real.
Consenso
AleoBFT
híbrido PoW + BFT
Recompensa de Bloco
~76.8674 ALEO
Sistema de Provas
zkSNARK
PoW baseado em zk-SNARK
Tempo de bloqueio
~7 sec
Linha do tempo do Aleo
De Pesquisa de Conhecimento Zero para Mainnet Minável
2019Aleo Fundada
Howard Wu e sua equipe fundaram a Aleo Systems. A pesquisa começa na aplicação de zk-SNARKs em uma blockchain programável completa — não apenas um aplicativo único.
2020Documento técnico & Leo
Aleo publica sua visão técnica. Início público do desenvolvimento de Leo — uma linguagem de programação de alto nível para escrever aplicativos ZK — começa.
2021Testnet I e II
Lançamento de redes de teste públicas. Milhares de mineradores participam do teste do mecanismo de mineração PoSW (Prova de Trabalho Sintética) usando hardware GPU.
2022Financiamento Série B
Aleo levanta US$ 200 milhões na Série B. O investimento valida a tese da camada de aplicação de prova ZK em escala institucional.
2023Testnet III & Push ASIC
Fase de teste estendida da rede de teste. Os primeiros fabricantes de ASIC começam o desenvolvimento de hardware dedicado de PoSW voltado para a carga de trabalho de computação de zk-proofs da Aleo.
2024Lançamento da Mainnet
Aleo mainnet entra em funcionamento. Miners ASIC da Bitmain e de outros fabricantes começam o deployment de produção na rede ao vivo.
Tecnologia & Visão
Por que a Aleo Representa um Novo Paradigma na Mineração por Prova de Trabalho
Cada outra blockchain de prova de trabalho usa a mineração como mecanismo de segurança — os mineradores competem para encontrar uma solução de hash que atenda ao objetivo de dificuldade da rede, o trabalho é arbitrário, e a única saída é a segurança do bloco. Aleo é categoricamente diferente. Na Aleo, o "trabalho" na prova de trabalho é a geração de argumentos de conhecimento sucintos não interativos de conhecimento zero — zk-SNARKs — que são realmente consumidos pela rede para viabilizar contratos inteligentes privados e programáveis.
Isso significa que os mineradores de Aleo não estão consumindo eletricidade em cálculos de hash sem sentido. Eles estão realizando computações criptográficas reais que têm utilidade genuína: provar que transações privadas e transições de estado de aplicativos são válidas sem revelar seus conteúdos. À medida que o ecossistema Aleo cresce e mais aplicativos são implantados, a demanda por geração de provas — e, portanto, por hardware de mineração — tem um impulso estrutural que a mineração de Bitcoin fundamentalmente não possui.
Para os mineradores, esta tese é convincente: você não está apenas especulando sobre o preço de uma moeda, mas participando da camada de infraestrutura de uma blockchain programável que preserva a privacidade, que levantou mais de US$ 200 milhões de investidores institucionais e conta com grandes empresas de venture capital entre seus apoiadores.
O Mecanismo de Mineração
Prova de Trabalho Concisa (PoSW): Mineração que Realmente Trabalha
O consenso PoSW da Aleo é o mecanismo de mineração mais inovador tecnologicamente em produção atualmente. Veja como funciona — e por que isso importa para sua tese de investimento.
O que é um zk-SNARK?
Um Argumento de Conhecimento Zero-Knowledge Sucinto Não Interativo é uma prova criptográfica que permite a uma parte (o provador) convencer outra parte (o verificador) de que uma declaração é verdadeira — sem revelar nenhuma informação sobre o motivo de sua veracidade. Em termos simples: você pode provar que conhece um segredo, ou que uma transação é válida, sem revelar o segredo ou os detalhes da transação. Esta é a base matemática que torna possíveis os contratos inteligentes privados da Aleo.
Como o PoSW Usa zk-SNARKs para Mineração
Na Prova de Trabalho Concisa da Aleo, os mineradores competem para gerar uma prova zk-SNARK válida para o desafio do bloco atual. O desafio é um problema computacional cuja solução exige trabalho de geração de prova genuíno — não apenas hashing SHA arbitrário. O primeiro minerador a produzir uma prova válida que atenda ao objetivo de dificuldade da rede ganha a recompensa do bloco. A prova é então armazenada na cadeia e pode ser verificada por qualquer nó em questão de milissegundos.
AleoBFT: A Camada de Consenso Híbrido
Aleo usa um consenso híbrido chamado AleoBFT que combina mineração PoSW com uma camada de finalização tolerante a falhas bizantinas. Os mineradores produzem blocos por meio da geração de prova PoSW. Os validadores (um papel separado) então finalizam esses blocos usando o consenso BFT, proporcionando uma finalização rápida e determinística sem comprometer o modelo de segurança descentralizado de proof-of-work. Esse design híbrido é o que permite os tempos de bloco de aproximadamente 10 segundos da Aleo, juntamente com a finalização criptográfica.
Como funciona a mineração Aleo PoSW — Passo a passo
01
Transmissão de Quebra-Cabeça
A rede transmite o quebra-cabeça do bloco atual — um problema de geração de prova zk-SNARK derivado do cabeçalho do bloco anterior e dos parâmetros do epoch atual. Todos os mineradores recebem o mesmo quebra-cabeça simultaneamente.
02
Corrida de Geração de Provas
Seu ASIC realiza o trabalho intensivo de cálculo de provas zk-SNARK candidatas. Isso não é apenas hashing de dados arbitrários — é uma computação cryptográfica real de provas. O hardware otimizado para essa carga de trabalho (ASICs PoSW) pode gerar provas muitas vezes mais rápido do que CPUs ou GPUs.
03
Meta de dificuldade atingida
Quando sua prova gerada atende ao alvo de dificuldade atual da rede — significando que possui as propriedades requeridas definidas pelo quebra-cabeça — seu minerador encontrou uma solução válida para o bloco. A prova é enviada imediatamente para a rede.
04
Finalização e Recompensa BFT
Validadores verificam a prova enviada (a verificação é quase instantânea para zk-SNARKs) e finalizam o bloco via AleoBFT. A recompensa do bloco é distribuída ao minerador vencedor. Os tokens ALEO chegam à sua carteira de autocustódia de acordo com a programação de pagamento do seu pool.
O Ecossistema
Leo, DeFi Privado e por que a Demanda por Aplicações Importa para os Mineradores
A linguagem de programação Leo da Aleo é uma linguagem de alto nível inspirada em Rust, projetada especificamente para escrever aplicações de conhecimento zero. Os desenvolvedores escrevem programas Leo que são compilados em circuitos zk-SNARK, permitindo contratos inteligentes totalmente privados, onde tanto as entradas quanto as saídas de uma computação podem ser mantidas em sigilo — algo impossível no Ethereum ou em qualquer outra blockchain transparente.
Para os mineradores, o ecossistema de aplicações é importante porque cria uma demanda contínua por geração de provas além das recompensas de blocos. À medida que mais aplicações Leo entram em funcionamento — protocolos DeFi privados, sistemas de votação confidenciais, ferramentas de verificação de identidade, infraestrutura financeira que preserva a conformidade — a necessidade da rede por cálculos de prova aumenta. Isso é estruturalmente diferente da mineração de Bitcoin, onde o único fator de renda a longo prazo para os mineradores é a recompensa do bloco e as taxas de transação.
A visão da Aleo de "privacidade programável" — onde qualquer aplicação pode operar com garantias de conhecimento zero — a posiciona como uma infraestrutura crítica para a próxima onda de adoção de blockchain em setores regulados: finanças, saúde, governo e identidade. Essa tese de demanda institucional é a razão pela qual a Aleo atraiu mais de US$ 200 milhões em financiamento antes do mainnet.
O que é construído na Aleo
DeFi Privado
AMMs e protocolos de empréstimo onde tamanhos de negociações e saldos de carteiras permanecem confidenciais. Impede front-running e exploração de MEV no nível do protocolo.
Votação Confidencial
Governança na cadeia e eleições onde os votos individuais são privados, mas o resultado agregado é verificável publicamente — matematicamente garantido.
Identidade ZK & KYC
Comprove que atende aos requisitos de conformidade (idade, jurisdição, acreditação) sem revelar seus documentos de identidade a uma contraparte ou à blockchain.
NFTs Privados e Jogos
Ativos e colecionáveis do jogo cuja propriedade é comprovável, mas não visível ao público — possibilitando mecânicas de jogo com informações ocultas na blockchain.
Finanças que preservam a conformidade
As instituições podem comprovar a conformidade de transações aos reguladores sem expor dados confidenciais de clientes em um livro-razão público — uma grande conquista para a adoção institucional de blockchain.
Oferta e Emissão
Economia de Token do Aleo: Oferta, Distribuição & Participação dos Mineiros
Aleo possui um fornecimento total de 1,5 bilhão de tokens ALEO. O modelo de emissão foi projetado para recompensar fortemente os mineradores nos primeiros anos da rede — quando a garantia de segurança é mais crítica — com uma redução gradual ao longo do tempo. A recompensa por bloco começou mais alta na abertura da mainnet e diminui de forma programada, semelhante em princípio a uma curva de halving, mas aplicada de maneira mais suave.
Um detalhe importante para os mineradores Aleo: a recompensa do bloco édividida entre o provador (o minerador que gera a prova vencedora) e o validador (que finaliza o bloco via AleoBFT). O provador recebe a maior parte — aproximadamente dois terços da recompensa do bloco — enquanto o validador recebe o restante. Ao minerar através de uma pool, você recebe a parte da recompensa do provador proporcional ao seu trabalho de prova contribuído.
Ao contrário de moedas puramente PoW, onde toda a emissão é destinada aos mineiros, o modelo híbrido da Aleo divide as recompensas entre dois tipos de participantes. Entenda essa divisão antes de calcular os retornos esperados — sua renda diária efetiva de ALEO é baseada na parcela do provador na recompensa do bloco, não no valor total da recompensa do bloco.
1,5 Bilhão de Oferta Total de ALEO
Distribuição de Tokens ALEO
Mineração (Proveres)~500M33%
Recompensas em blocos pagas aos mineradores PoSW ao longo do cronograma de emissão. A principal fonte de renda para operadores de ASIC.
Validações~250M17%
Recompensas de bloco alocadas aos validadores AleoBFT que finalizam blocos. Separado da renda de minerador.
Ecossistema & Subvenções~375M25%
Reservado para concessões a desenvolvedores, crescimento do ecossistema e desenvolvimento do protocolo. Livre de direitos ao longo do tempo.
Investidores e Equipe~375M25%
Alocações iniciais para investidores e equipe. Sujeito a cronogramas de aquisição de ações de longo prazo alinhados ao crescimento da rede.
Chave para Mineradores
Seu ASIC ganha apenas da parte dos Provers — aproximadamente ⅔ da recompensa de bloco exibida. Use isso ao modelar a renda diária.
Como o Aleo se Compara
Aleo vs Outras Blockchains Mineráveis
Aleo ocupa uma posição única no cenário de mineração. Nenhuma outra moeda minerável oferece contratos inteligentes privados ou PoW baseado em provas de conhecimento zero.
FatorAleo (ALEO)Alephium (ALPH)Bitcoin (BTC)
Sistema de ProvasALEO: zk-SNARK (PoSW)ALPH: Hash Blake3 (PoW)BTC: Hash SHA-256 (PoW)
Tipo de TrabalhoALEO: Provas ZK reaisALPH: Cálculo de hashBTC: Cálculo de hash
FinanciamentoALEO: Mais de $200 milhões levantadosALPH: Auto-financiadoBTC: Não se aplica (2009)
Aleo é a única blockchain nesta comparação onde os mineradores estão realizando trabalhos criptograficamente úteis que alimentam diretamente o produto principal da rede — computação programável privada.
Casa vs Industrial
Extraindo Aleo de Casa: O Que Esperar
As características do hardware de mineração Aleo dependem fortemente da geração específica de ASIC. Como a geração de prova PoSW é uma carga de trabalho computacional diferente da hashing SHA-256 ou Scrypt, o consumo de energia dos ASICs varia mais entre os tipos de máquinas. ASICs Aleo de nível básico voltados para mineradores domésticos foram desenvolvidos com consumos de energia na faixa de 500 a 1.200W — gerenciáveis com infraestrutura elétrica residencial padrão.
O mercado de ASICs para Aleo é mais jovem do que Bitcoin ou Litecoin, o que cria tanto oportunidade quanto incerteza para os mineiros domésticos. Os primeiros adotantes que implantam hardware enquanto a rede ainda está estabelecendo seu ecossistema de ASICs podem potencialmente se beneficiar de uma dificuldade mais baixa e de uma participação diária maior por máquina — mas o mercado está evoluindo rapidamente e hardware de múltiplos fabricantes está se tornando disponível. Confira nossas listas de produtos para ASICs de Aleo atualmente disponíveis e suas especificações verificadas de hashrate.
Escala Industrial
Posicionamento no térreo em uma rede apoiada por US$ 200 milhões
Para operadores industriais, a Aleo apresenta uma oportunidade rara: lançar uma quantidade significativa de hashrate em uma rede bem financiada e tecnicamente confiável, enquanto o ecossistema ASIC ainda está em seus estágios iniciais. O apoio institucional (Série B de US$200 milhões), a comunidade ativa de desenvolvedores de aplicativos Leo e o claro caso de uso no mundo real para infraestrutura de privacidade ZK sugerem uma demanda estrutural de longo prazo por prova de computação.
Operações de mineração em larga escala na Aleo se beneficiam das mesmas economias que outras fazendas ASIC — contratos de energia industrial, acordos de colocation e compras em grande quantidade de hardware. O principal diferencial é que a carga de geração de provas da Aleo é proveniente da era GPU, o que significa que a vantagem do ASIC sobre hardware comum ainda é muito grande e os pioneiros capturam uma parcela desproporcional das recompensas por bloco.
Mercado de ASICs iniciaisMais de US$ 200 milhões em apoio institucional
Guia do Comprador
Escolhendo o Minerador Aleo Certo
A seleção de ASICs Aleo segue três métricas principais — com uma reviravolta importante, única no hardware de geração de prova PoSW.
Taxa de prova (c/s ou prova/s)
A mineração de Aleo é medida em provas por segundo (proof/s) ou em enigmas de coinbase por segundo (c/s), não em TH/s ou MH/s. Isso ocorre porque a unidade de trabalho é uma prova zk-SNARK, não um hash. Uma taxa de provas mais alta significa uma parcela proporcional maior das recompensas diárias de blocos. Compare máquinas com base nesse métrico, em vez de apenas o consumo de watt.
Mais provas = Mais ALEO
Eficiência Energética (W/prova)
Para os mineradores da Aleo, a eficiência é expressa em watts por prova por segundo (W/prova). Quanto menor, melhor — isso significa que cada prova que você gera consome menos eletricidade. À medida que o mercado de ASICs amadurece e novas gerações de silício chegam, as razões W/prova melhoram significativamente. Sempre compare a eficiência entre máquinas, não apenas as taxas brutas de provas.
Mais baixo = Mais lucrativo
Suporte de Firmware e Protocolos
O protocolo da Aleo tem sido desenvolvido ativamente desde o lançamento mainnet. Ao contrário do Bitcoin, onde a especificação SHA-256 não mudou em 15 anos, os parâmetros PoSW e a estrutura do puzzle da Aleo podem ser atualizados à medida que o protocolo evolui. Sempre verifique se o fabricante do seu ASIC fornece atualizações de firmware ativas e garantias explícitas de compatibilidade com mainnet antes de comprar.
Compatibilidade de Protocolo Crítica
Os Números
Entendendo a Rentabilidade da Mineração Aleo
A lucratividade da mineração Aleo possui várias variáveis únicas em comparação com outras moedas PoW — mais importante, a divisão de recompensas entre o provedor/validatore o contínuo aumento na dificuldade do quebra-cabeça PoSW.
01
Preço ALEO (USD)
ALEO é um token de mainnet lançado recentemente e apresenta uma volatilidade de preço maior do que as moedas de mineração mais estabelecidas. Tokens em estágio inicial podem experimentar grandes oscilações de preço em ambas as direções, impulsionadas por eventos de listagem, notícias do ecossistema e condições de mercado mais amplas. Os mineradores que conseguem operar de forma lucrativa com preços de ALEO 50–60% abaixo da sua cálculo na data de compra estão na posição mais forte. Manter ALEO acumulado durante períodos de preços baixos é uma estratégia comum para mineradores com convicção de longo prazo na tese da infraestrutura de privacidade ZK.
02
A Participação do Provador — Sua Fatia Real
Ao contrário das moedas puramente PoW, onde 100% da recompensa do bloco vai para o minerador, a Aleo divide as recompensas entre provedores (mineradores) e validadores. A parcela do provedor é aproximadamente dois terços da recompensa do bloco. Isso significa que, se uma recompensa de bloco for exibida como ~23 ALEO, seu ganho efetivo como minerador é de aproximadamente 15–16 ALEO por bloco encontrado pelo seu pool. Sempre use a figura da parcela do provedor — não a recompensa bruta do bloco — ao calcular a renda diária e o ROI.
03
Dificuldade de Prova de Rede
A dificuldade do quebra-cabeça PoSW de Aleo ajusta-se para atingir tempos de bloco consistentes à medida que mais hardware de geração de provas entra em operação. À medida que o mercado de ASICs para Aleo cresce — e está crescendo rapidamente após o lançamento na mainnet — a dificuldade aumentará e a parcela proporcional de recompensas de cada máquina diminuirá. Esta é a mesma trajetória de todas as redes PoW ao passarem de CPU/GPU para domínio de ASICs, mas comprimida em um período mais curto porque o desenvolvimento de ASICs começou próximo ao lançamento na mainnet. Modele a dificuldade de forma conservadora.
04
Custo de Eletricidade e Prova de Eficiência
O consumo de energia dos ASICs Aleo varia de aproximadamente 500W a mais de 3.000W, dependendo da unidade. Como a carga de trabalho (geração de prova zk-SNARK) é mais complexa computacionalmente do que a hash SHA-256, os ASICs de gerações anteriores tendem a ser menos eficientes em termos de energia do que os mineradores de Bitcoin de gerações equivalentes. Essa diferença diminui a cada nova geração de ASIC. Calcule seu custo total diário de energia e subtraia-o dos ganhos brutos de ALEO (parte do provador) para obter seu lucro líquido diário.
05
Cronograma de Emissão de Recompensa de Bloco
A recompensa por bloco da Aleo diminui ao longo do tempo de acordo com uma programação predefinida. A curva de emissão concentra as recompensas nos primeiros anos para impulsionar a segurança da rede — o que significa que os mineradores que estão implantando agora estão na fase de maior recompensa da história da emissão da Aleo. À medida que as recompensas diminuem nos anos seguintes, a renda dos miners se tornará progressivamente mais dependente das taxas de transação das aplicações Leo e do preço do token ALEO. Essa concentração inicial de emissão é um argumento para o deploy precoce — e para entender que os valores atuais de recompensa por bloco são maiores do que serão em 3–5 anos.
Seleção de Piscina
Melhores Pools de Mineração Aleo
O software de pool Aleo deve suportar o protocolo de submissão de prova PoSW — que é estruturalmente diferente de um endpoint Stratum padrão usado por mineradores SHA-256 ou Scrypt. Sempre verifique se o seu pool escolhido possui suporte nativo ao PoSW Aleo e uma integração ativa e mantida com o software do nó principal do Aleo antes de conectar o hardware.
Como a rede principal da Aleo é relativamente nova, o ecossistema de pools é menor do que o do Bitcoin ou Litecoin, mas está crescendo rapidamente. Pools maiores oferecem pagamentos diários mais consistentes. Pools menores oferecem maior variância, mas às vezes taxas mais baixas. Para a maioria dos operadores de ASIC, uma pool entre as top 3 por hash rate é a escolha padrão sensata para estabilidade de renda.
Aleo Pool (HiveOn)1%PPLNS
Uma das maiores piscinas Aleo por hashrate. Infraestrutura confiável, suporte nativo ao PoSW, pagamentos diários, painel de ganhos de provador/validadeor claro.
Miningpool.center1%PPS+
Modo PPS+ para pagamentos ALEO de variância zero. Boa escolha para operadores que precisam de renda diária previsível. Suporte nativo à rede principal Aleo.
2Miners1%PPLNS
Pool multimoeda estabelecido com presença crescente da Aleo. Infraestrutura confiável, histórico de pagamentos limpo, cobertura de servidores na Europa.
Flexpool0.5%PPLNS
Opção de taxa mais baixa com suporte nativo ao Aleo. Equipe de desenvolvimento ativa, estrutura de taxas transparente, boa reputação na comunidade desde a era ETH.
Community Pool (Aleo Network)0%PPLNS
Piscina comunitária de taxa zero. Menor, mas ideologicamente alinhada com a missão de descentralização da Aleo. Melhor para miners que também desejam apoiar a saúde da rede.
Cuidado
Erros comuns na mineração de Aleo
A arquitetura inovadora da Aleo cria armadilhas únicas na mineração com provas ZK. Evite-as antes de investir.
Usando a Recompensa Completa de Bloco nos Cálculos de ROI
O erro mais comum na mineração Aleo. A recompensa exibida por bloco cobre a parte tanto do provador (minerador) quanto do validador. Seu ASIC recebe apenas a parcela do provador — aproximadamente dois terços do valor bruto. Usar a recompensa total do bloco em seu calculador de lucratividade irá superestimar sua renda diária esperada em cerca de 50%. Sempre confirme a porcentagem atual da participação do provador na documentação oficial da Aleo antes de modelar seus retornos.
Compra de Hardware Sem Confirmação de Compatibilidade de Protocolo
A especificação PoSW da Aleo é diferente de qualquer outro algoritmo de mineração. "Mineradores ASIC" genéricos que alegam compatibilidade com Blake3 ou outros não são mineradores Aleo. Somente hardware especificamente projetado e testado para a geração de prova PoSW da Aleo irá gerar uma taxa de hash significativa na rede Aleo. Verifique a compatibilidade explícita com a rede principal da Aleo com o fabricante antes de realizar a compra.
Ignorando o ecossistema de ASICs em rápido crescimento
Aleo mainnet é novo e hardware ASIC de vários fabricantes está chegando ao mercado em rápida sucessão. A dificuldade está crescendo rapidamente. Miners que basearem suas projeções de ROI na dificuldade atual sem levar em conta um crescimento de 2 a 3 vezes nos próximos 12 meses descobrirão que seus retornos no mundo real ficarão significativamente abaixo das expectativas. Modele cenários de dificuldade pessimistas de forma agressiva.
Confundir Taxa de Prova com Taxa de Hash
O desempenho da Aleo é medido em provas por segundo (c/s), não em TH/s ou MH/s. Essas unidades não são comparáveis a outros algoritmos de mineração. Não tente comparar a "taxa de hash" de um minerador Aleo diretamente com um minerador de Bitcoin ou Kaspa. Use calculadoras de lucratividade específicas da ALEO que levam em consideração a taxa de prova e a dificuldade atual da rede como entradas.
Ignorando Monitoramento da Atualização de Firmware
O protocolo da Aleo está sendo desenvolvido ativamente após a mainnet. Os parâmetros PoSW e as estruturas de puzzle podem ser atualizados por meio de atualizações na rede. Um ASIC Aleo com firmware desatualizado pode gerar provas inválidas, minerar na forquilha errada da cadeia ou falhar na conexão com o software atualizado do pool. Monitore os canais do fabricante e aplique as atualizações prontamente.
Olhando para o papel de Validador vs Provador
Alguns participantes do Aleo atuam como validadores (que finalizam blocos via AleoBFT) ao invés de proofers (mineradores). Esses papéis têm requisitos de hardware diferentes e estruturas de recompensa distintas. Os mineradores ASIC são proofers. Não confunda a documentação do pool sobre as recompensas de validadores com sua renda real como minerador — eles são participantes separados no sistema AleoBFT.
Perguntas Frequentes
Perguntas frequentes sobre mineração Aleo
Tudo o que você precisa saber antes de comprar seu primeiro minerador ASIC 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)
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.
Pronto para Começar a Mineração de Aleo?
Navegue por nossa linha completa de mineradoras ASIC Aleo PoSW acima. O ecossistema de mineração ZK está em seus estágios iniciais — posições estabelecidas agora oferecem a maior relação potencial de recompensa para dificuldade na história de emissão do Aleo. Nossa equipe irá ajudá-lo a encontrar a máquina certa para sua configuração de energia e objetivos de investimento.