Solayer Docs
  • What is Solayer?
  • Why on Solana?
  • First Principles
  • Solayer Overview
    • Introduction
      • Litepaper
      • Official Links
      • FAQ
      • Terms and Concepts
    • What is sSOL?
      • Liquidity
      • sSOL in DeFi
      • Trading & Rewards
    • Restaking Guides
      • Native SOL Restaking
        • Restaking Tutorial
      • LST Restaking
        • LST Restaking Tutorial
      • Unstake sSOL
        • Unstaking Tutorial
      • Delegation
    • Endogenous AVS
      • What is an AVS?
      • Quality of Service
      • Delegate Tokens
  • Community
    • Restaking Epochs
      • Epoch 0
      • Epoch 1
      • Epoch 2
    • Solayer Valley Episodes
      • Episode 1
      • Eligibility Guide
      • Rewards Claiming Guide
      • Unstaking Credit Deduction
  • Developers Guides
    • For Builders
      • Architecture
      • Building on Solayer
      • Solayer Programs
    • Security
      • Audits
      • Multisig Committee
      • Bounties
  • Informational
    • Brand Kit
    • Partnerships
    • How to use?
      • Use Ledger
      • Use Phantom
  • Quick Links
    • Website
    • Discord
    • Twitter
    • Youtube
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Why on Solana?

Trust is central to any decentralized system. Proof of stake is the most common Byzantine Fault-Tolerant Consensus in use today. However, bootstrapping a proof of stake ecosystem is challenging. There must be an economically incentivized fair distribution of initial stake, often in the form of newly minted tokens. This process can entail steep financial costs for participants, as they need to invest capital in an asset with an uncertain risk profile.

The concept of shared security emerged to solve this issue - leveraging the stake in established POS systems with well-recognized assets like ETH and Solana. These systems, with their established validator networks, can provide security for other decentralized systems. Newer networks could use the existing stake on such chains to provide economic guarantees and security.

Solana's Superior Infrastructure

Solana's high-performant, cost-effective, and high execution infrastructure is superior for SVN (Shared Validator Network) builders, operators, and restakers. The advantages of utilizing Solana as the foundational platform for SVN include:

  1. Cost-Effective SVN Construction: Utilizing Solana as the native Data Availability layer for SVN significantly reduces the cost of building an SVN compared to Ethereum.

  2. Low latency application: Solana's lower block time production of 0.4 seconds compared to Ethereum's 20 seconds, enables low-latency SVNs resulting in a more responsive user experience. Examples include compute-intensive games, GPU clusters, and high-frequency DeFi applications.

  3. Cheaper state sync/update/finalization: The process of state finalization, sync, and update of SVNs, which is a continual process to ensure the immutability and synchronization of validated applications, is considerably more cost-effective on Solana compared to other viable networks

  4. Cheaper state transition storage: Storing state transitions in SVN is significantly cheaper when powered by Solana, making it a more economical choice for developers and operators.

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Last updated 9 months ago

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