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Fantom Reduces Validator Requirement to 50k FTM, Prioritizes Decentralization
David Pokima
Last updated:
January 15, 2024 21:00 EST | 2 min read
The company wrote on X (formerly Twitter) about the new developments, informing its community of changes, reasons, and the consensus mechanism operations in the network.
The move makes it more accessible to run a Fantom node as the company stresses decentralization and the positive impact it would have on the overall network.
According to the post, Fantom stands to gain from cutting down the requirements for node operators and the extensive decentralized eco, citing reasons such as preventing malicious attacks.
Several blockchain projects have pushed forward their decentralized mechanisms. Still, apart from engaging the community and going away from the standards of centralized finance, the decentralized mechanism protects platforms from hackers while settling transactions.
Fantom Network differs from Ethereum because, in the former, validators confirm and bundle transactions before sending them to others to agree. With more validators, transactions will reach validators faster on the network as opposed to slight concerns on slow and clustered s.
Fantom Network Quells Concerns
Per the statement, the platform is positioning itself for the future of decentralized networks without a few validators controlling what happens on the . In recent times, decentralized applications and blockchains have been criticized for not living up to the ideals of decentralized finance (DeFi).
A major reason for this is the cost of staking and becoming a validator placing the bulk of nodes in the the hands of centralized players.
Since existing validators will still be in the majority, new ones can join the and grow to become an essential part of the network.
The platform projects large validators to control 2/3 of the network in coming months handling more transactions to ensure stability in order to quell fears of a disruption.
There are also concerns about a downgrade in the process of onboarding new validators which the company dismissed adding that there would be no downgrade in performance with the new development.
“A validator’s power to confirm TXs is proportional to their stake amount and not the number of validators a given person runs. For example, a validator with 1 million FTM staked would have the same power as twenty smaller validators, each with 50k FTM staked,” the platform added.
At press time, FTM trades at $0.40 marking a 2% increase in the last 24 hours. This means that the cost of becoming a validator has been reduced to approximately $25,000.