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Monday 7 November 2016

November 6th 2016 Block Maker Statistics


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If you want to try your hand at generating your own block maker statistics and you know some R then I've some scripts that allow you to download bitcoin block chain data from various APIs, converted to a .csv table (a format supported by spreadsheets). So far  Blockchain.infoBlocktrail.com and Kaiko.com are supported.



Solved block statistics table. This table lists all statistics that can be derived from the number of blocks a hashrate contributor has solved for the past week. Block attributions are either from primary sources such as those claimed by a particular pool website, or secondary sources such as coinbase signatures, or known generation addresses. When dependent on secondary sources only, data may be inaccurate and miss some blocks if a particular block-solver has gone to some trouble to hide solved blocks. This will result in an underestimate of the block-solver hashrate.

Note that actual pool hashrates when derived from shares submitted per unit time will be more accurate than the hashrate estimates given in this table.

"BitAffNet" is Bitcoin Affiliate Network

"Dot pool" and "Day pool" are block makers that are unknown, but that have enduring coinbase signatures, address clustering, or generation address reuse similarities. However, since they are unknown and unclaimed we can't be sure if these block makers are actually part of another known block maker.  

"Unknown" is not an entity but the group of blocks to which I cannot give attribution using the methods given above.


Reused but unknown generation addresses
Unknown generation addresses that are not reused are probably solominers or private mining concerns that don't have share-holders wanting to follow transactions. However, reused addresses are probably from hash contributors that do not wish to remain anonymous. These need to be identified so they can be removed from the "Unknown" group. I'm not interested in identifying those who wish to remain completely anonymous, so I'm not trying to trace originating IP addresses -- if you want that information, as Blockchain.info can supply it.



Blocks solved by unknown but re-used generation addresses Oct 30 2016 to Nov 05 2016
Unknown recurring generation address Blocks solved this week Percentage of network Percentage of unknown Estimate of hashrate Blocks solved ever
18EPLvrs2UE11kWBB3ABS7Crwj5tTBYPoa 6 0.59 % 50.00 % 11 Phps 108
18HEMWFXM9UGPVZHUMdBPD3CMFWYn2NPRX 4 0.40 % 33.33 % 7 Phps 10
1AZ6BkCo4zgTuuLpRStJH8iNsehXTMp456 2 0.20 % 16.67 % 4 Phps 2



Diachronic hashrate distribution: Stacked histogram percentage of network blocks over the past week.

Rather than a simple "pie chart" of blocks solved over the past week, this plot represents an estimate of the hashrate intensity function at any given time. This means that variance is reduced, so if you want to see intra-week changes in network ownership this chart is much more than a simple 24 hour or four day pie chart. If there are very sudden changes in hashrate - for example a 50% or greater change over several hours - the smoothing method will not be able to distinguish this from variance.




Hashrate distribution: Heatmap of historical percentage of network blocks attributable to block makers.
The data in the above hashrate distribution histogram is a subset of the weekly data data below.



Hashrate distribution:  Daily proportion of network for current block makers.
The next three plots group hashrate distribution into three tiers:  The block makers with the largest proportion of the network, block makers with an average proportion of the network, and block makers with the smallest proportion of the network.

Because the data is a daily summary, the kernel smoothing shows quite clearly the variance in hashrate distribution that occurs in block making. It will also show the intra-week hashrate movements which were previously unavailable.







Historical centralisation of bitcoin network block creation
This chart shows the changes in the amount of the network controlled by the largest block maker, second largest, and so on up to the twentieth largest (should that number of block makers exist during the week the estimate was made).





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Created using R and various packages, especially dplyrdata.tableggplot2 and forecast.

Recommended reading:

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.



5 comments:

  1. 1AZ6BkCo4zgTuuLpRStJH8iNsehXTMp456 is https://bitcoin-india.org/

    ReplyDelete
  2. 18HEMWFXM9UGPVZHUMdBPD3CMFWYn2NPRX is a private pool of unknown owner run by https://twitter.com/shawnp0wers and 18EPLvrs2UE11kWBB3ABS7Crwj5tTBYPoa is very likely GoGreenLight http://www.coindesk.com/knc-miner-acquisition-gogreenlight/ or whoever acquired KNC's operation

    ReplyDelete
  3. re: shawnp0wers -- I saw on the twitter page that he has worked at CBT Nuggets, which made a few blocks a while back. I wonder if he was involved? Might explain the "--Nug--" he signs some of his blocks with. How did you find the other generation address?

    re: 18EPLvrs2UE11kWBB3ABS7Crwj5tTBYPoa
    You think it's Swedish - it that because of a Swedish IP address, or is it the same IP address that KNC was using?

    ReplyDelete
  4. Yeah, I think those blocks are also his, he changed generation address at one point, think they were sweeping coins to the same place.

    Well 18EPLvrs2UE11kWBB3ABS7Crwj5tTBYPoa was setting the BIP109 version bit just like KNC while basically nobody else was.

    ReplyDelete

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