Tuning PoW with Hybrid Expenditure
Itay Tsabary, Alexander Spiegelman, Ittay Eyal

TL;DR
This paper introduces Hybrid Expenditure Blockchain (HEB), a new PoW mechanism that decouples external costs from rewards, significantly reducing energy consumption while maintaining security and decentralization.
Contribution
HEB generalizes Nakamoto's protocol by enabling tuning of external expenditure through internal-expenditure mechanisms, reducing resource use without compromising security.
Findings
HEB reduces external energy consumption by half compared to Bitcoin.
HEB maintains similar resilience against rational attackers as Nakamoto's protocol.
HEB preserves decentralization and permissionless features of blockchain systems.
Abstract
Proof of Work (PoW) is a Sybil-deterrence security mechanism. It introduces an external cost to a system by requiring computational effort to perform actions. However, since its inception, a central challenge was to tune this cost. Initial designs for deterring spam email and DoS attacks applied overhead equally to honest participants and attackers. Requiring too little effort did not deter attacks, whereas too much encumbered honest participation. This might be the reason it was never widely adopted. Nakamoto overcame this trade-off in Bitcoin by distinguishing desired from malicious behavior and introducing internal rewards for the former. This solution gained popularity in securing cryptocurrencies and using the virtual internally-minted tokens for rewards. However, in existing blockchain protocols the internal rewards fund (almost) the same value of external expenses. Thus, as the…
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