Changelog:
Errorlog:
- Last week's orphaned block at Kano.is was in error - there were no orphaned blocks there. The bug that caused it was specific to Kano.is and has been fixed.
0. EclipseMC profitability low again
Eclipse's profitability has been quite low for a while, but not impossibly so. However after the months long attack at GHash.IO I'm closely monitoring anything that appears to be a bit unusual.
1. Changes or additions to profit plot?
I'm thinking that the pool profitability plot should use every block as data points (rather than the weekly summary) since I'm using smoothing anyway and it would allow more direct profit comparisons of pools, although it would be a poorer timewise comparison. Maybe two plots - the current timewise comparison and a separate blockwise comparison? Let me know what you think.
Eclipse's profitability has been quite low for a while, but not impossibly so. However after the months long attack at GHash.IO I'm closely monitoring anything that appears to be a bit unusual.
1. Changes or additions to profit plot?
I'm thinking that the pool profitability plot should use every block as data points (rather than the weekly summary) since I'm using smoothing anyway and it would allow more direct profit comparisons of pools, although it would be a poorer timewise comparison. Maybe two plots - the current timewise comparison and a separate blockwise comparison? Let me know what you think.
Now that you can see more of the interesting analyses I can perform if I have this data, you might be even more keen to encourage your pool to provide a "Hall of Fame" feed. To reiterate, I need user account hashrates in order to estimate a number of different network statistics, and to do that I need user account hashrates averaged over at least an hour, preferably several hours or more. The data can be anonymised - it's just the user hashrates I need.
Explanation of the tables and charts
Pool reported block history statistics. This table lists all statistics that can be derived from the number of blocks a hashrate contributor has solved for the past week using all solved blocks - both valid and orphaned - and difficulty 1 shares per round.
- A much more accurate estimate of the hashrate, confidence intervals are unnecessary.
- Orphan races lost, and percentage of solved blocks that were not added to the blockchain.
- "Luck" is the usual difficulty 1 equivalent shares per round / mining difficulty, or (equivalently) accepted shares / expected shares.
- CDF: The cumulative density function (CDF) measures the percentage of the time this number accepted shares / expected shares would be less than the calculated value, given the number of valid + invalid blocks.
- Pool profitability compares variables such as total number of shares in a week and total reward (including transactions) in a week with the expected reward per share as follows (pool fee not included):
a = reward estimate (tx-free bitcoin rewards) per valid block including orphaned blocks
b = estimated difficulty 1 shares for valid blocks
c = actual rewards for valid blocks
d = submitted difficulty 1 shares for all blocks including orphaned blocks
Actual reward per share = c / d
Theoretical reward per share = a / b
Profitability = Actual reward per share / Theoretical reward per share
Average hashrate per solved block (valid + invalid)
Hashrates are calculated from the pool reported difficulty-1 equivalent shares per round and the pool reported block solve times for all solved blocks, both valid and invalid. Note that BTC Guild is not included since the difficulty 1 equivalent shares per round data is not reported; instead use BTC Guild's hashrate chart which has matched my past estimates quite well and which I regard as accurate.
Pool profitability
Pool profitability compares variables such as total number of shares in a week and total reward (including transactions) in a week with the expected reward per share. Pool fee is not included, but this is a good basis on which to compare pools, as long as you're aware of pool fees, whether transaction fees are paid to you, and whether or not the pool is paying for orphaned blocks. Details of the profitability calculation are given in the block history table.
Obviously this chart is only relevant to miner income if the reward method is not PPS; however the charts can also be interpreted as the profitability of the pool, so it might give you some insight into the financial health of a PPS pool.
Density of orphaned blocks
This chart shows the density of orphaned blocks per pool, as a function of blocks solved by that pool. The fringe indicates the actual occurrences of the orphaned blocks, and the colour of the line and fringe indicate the approximate date.
Some orphan data may be missing from Polmine.
Pool user hashrate and combined user hashrate densities
The top facet of this chart shows the proportion of user accounts with a given hashrate - the thicker the "violin" the greater the density of user accounts with a particular hashrate.
The bottom facet is the same data, weighted by hashrate. In effect, it shows what proportion of the pool's hashrate is supplied by particular hashrates. The area of the "violins" is proportional to their total hashrate.
Note that for some pools the hashrate is averaged over twenty four hours, some pools are averaged over an hour or more and some for only fifteen minutes, so expect some variance in the results.
Gini coefficient for miner hashrates
The Gini coefficient measures inequality, as is further discussed here. In the plot below, it is measuring inequality within public mining pools. The lower the coefficient, the less inequality in the pool.These indices are much higher than most things for which the Gini coefficient is calculated. For example in countries notoriously unequal incomes it is rarely above 65% (Seychelles, 2007), and educational inequality in the poorest countries comes close, at 92% (Mali, 1990). There are a large number of bitcoin miners with near (or less than) zero income, and a small few who actually make a living.
"All combined" is the Gini coefficient for miners at all pools that can be monitored, combined. It is more affected by larger pools and less affected by smaller pools.
Thank you to blocktrail.com for use of their address data, and coincadence.com for their p2pool miner data.
organofcorti.blogspot.com is a reader supported blog:
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Created using R and various packages, especially dplyr, data.table, ggplot2 and forecast.
Thank you to blocktrail.com for use of their address data, and coincadence.com for their p2pool miner data.
Find a typo or spelling error? Email me with the details at organofcorti@organofcorti.org and if you're the first to email me I'll pay you 0.01 btc per ten errors.
Please refer to the most recent blog post for current rates or rule changes.
I'm terrible at proofreading, so some of these posts may be worth quite a bit to the keen reader.
Exceptions:
- Errors in text repeated across multiple posts: I will only pay for the most recent errors rather every single occurrence.
- Errors in chart texts: Since I can't fix the chart texts (since I don't keep the data that generated them) I can't pay for them. Still, they would be nice to know about!
I write in British English.
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Are you sure about that eclipsemc 4 weeks luck? They have had over <70% profitability in the entire period and it is labeled here as >100%
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure what you mean, but I'm certain of the results. Here's the dataset if you want to check for yourself:
ReplyDeleteheight date shares difficulty reward txfee
1: 365322 2015-07-14 37815853056 51076366303 25 0.30989251
2: 365403 2015-07-15 15066809344 51076366303 25 0.32455594
3: 365783 2015-07-18 72242003968 51076366303 25 0.10643563
4: 365985 2015-07-19 40251650048 51076366303 25 0.08824874
5: 366084 2015-07-20 20729440256 51076366303 25 0.22418071
6: 366195 2015-07-20 22693632000 51076366303 25 0.13594961
7: 366322 2015-07-21 28474216448 51076366303 25 0.28973617
8: 366335 2015-07-21 2892648192 51076366303 25 0.00000000
9: 366452 2015-07-22 23432865792 51076366303 25 0.06924578
10: 366711 2015-07-24 54215020544 51076366303 25 0.11101152
11: 366775 2015-07-24 9174786048 51076366303 25 0.08149252
12: 366854 2015-07-25 15038771200 51076366303 25 0.22686073
13: 367360 2015-07-28 97616601088 52278304846 25 0.15184378
14: 367421 2015-07-29 14185914368 52278304846 25 0.31354303
15: 368273 2015-08-03 158611275776 52278304846 25 0.30601727
16: 368296 2015-08-03 4466317824 52278304846 25 0.07479704
17: 369646 2015-08-13 254284021760 52699842409 25 0.03983456
18: 369691 2015-08-13 9219522560 52699842409 25 0.17406180
19: 369840 2015-08-14 27490502656 52699842409 25 0.25856714
20: 370036 2015-08-15 40262037504 52699842409 25 0.04397157