HaPPY-Mine: Designing a Mining Reward Function
Lucianna Kiffer, Rajmohan Rajaraman

TL;DR
This paper introduces HaPPY-Mine, a novel reward function for cryptocurrencies that promotes decentralization by pegging rewards to hashrate, ensuring unique, stable, and secure equilibria even with heterogeneous miner costs.
Contribution
The paper proposes HaPPY-Mine, a new dynamic reward function that enhances decentralization and security in blockchain mining compared to traditional static reward models.
Findings
HaPPY-Mine guarantees a unique equilibrium with a stable miner set.
It results in a more decentralized hashrate distribution.
The equilibrium remains secure against collusion and sybil attacks.
Abstract
In cryptocurrencies, the block reward is meant to serve as the incentive mechanism for miners to commit resources to create blocks and in effect secure the system. Existing systems primarily divide the reward in proportion to expended resources and follow one of two static models for total block reward: (i) a fixed reward for each block (e.g., Ethereum), or (ii) one where the block reward halves every set number of blocks (e.g., the Bitcoin model of halving roughly every 4 years) but otherwise remains fixed between halvings. In recent work, a game-theoretic analysis of the static model under asymmetric miner costs showed that an equilibrium always exists and is unique. Their analysis also reveals how asymmetric costs can lead to large-scale centralization in blockchain mining, a phenomenon that has been observed in Bitcoin and Ethereum and highlighted by other studies. In this work we…
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