One of the most epic battles that seem to have no end in sight in the cryptocurrency world is in the way and manner a given coin is made, or its blockchain secured by “miners’’. From the proponents of Bitcoin who point to the stellar record of the alpha cryptocurrency’s blockchain to those of newer altcoins that say Bitcoin is stagnated and would eventually lose relevance, the debate about Proof of Work and Proof of Stake Mining Protocols is as fresh and as heated as ever. So what is all the fuss about these two and what if any makes one different from another?
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Definitions
A proof of work mining protocol is the pioneering verification and mining protocol upon which Bitcoin raised the curtain over the cryptocurrency industry. It is the use of computers, coupled with specialized hardware which are deployed by their owner to solve large amounts of mathematical puzzles with the chance of being reward with the cryptocurrency that is native to the given blockchain.
On the other hand a proof of stake mining protocol is one that counters the very foundation of proof of work in that the user doesn’t need to deploy expensive specialized mining equipment in order to create new cryptocurrencies or help in securing the blockchain itself. It is a mining protocol with which the miner stakes their own cryptocurrency holdings in their native wallet, which helps in validating transactions in return for a token that accrues to the person that staked their money on the platform.
Power Consumption
A proof of work mining protocol is one that requires inordinate and some say needless consumption of electricity which stems from the use of specialized hardware to provide the computational power needed to solve the puzzles to increase the chance of the miner getting rewards regularly.
With proof of stake, the miner/validator needs no specific hardware in order to efficiently become a miner in their rights. The “mining power” of a user on a proof of stake protocol depends on the number of coins or toke