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Technical
Intermediate

Validator

別名: Network Validator, Block Producer

A network participant that verifies transactions and produces new blocks in a Proof of Stake blockchain, earning rewards for securing the network.

A validator is a node operator in a Proof of Stake (PoS) blockchain responsible for proposing and attesting to new blocks. Validators lock up (stake) cryptocurrency as collateral, which can be partially or fully destroyed (slashed) if they act maliciously or fail to perform their duties.

How Validators Work:

  1. An operator stakes the required minimum tokens (e.g., 32 ETH for Ethereum)
  2. The protocol randomly selects validators to propose blocks
  3. Other validators attest (vote) that the proposed block is valid
  4. Once enough attestations are collected, the block is finalized
  5. Participating validators earn rewards in the native token

Validator Responsibilities: - Block Proposals: Creating new blocks with pending transactions - Attestations: Voting on the validity of proposed blocks - Sync Committees: Helping light clients verify the chain - Uptime: Maintaining near-100% availability

Rewards and Penalties:

ActionResult
Correct attestationSmall reward (~0.001 ETH)
Block proposalLarger reward
Missing attestationSmall penalty
Double votingSevere slashing (up to 100%)
Extended downtimeGradual balance drain

Running a Validator: - Requires dedicated hardware or cloud servers - Must run both execution and consensus clients - Needs reliable internet and power - Solo staking gives full rewards but requires technical knowledge - Staking services and pools offer simpler alternatives

Validator Counts by Network: Ethereum has over 900,000 active validators, making it one of the most decentralized PoS networks. Solana has about 1,500, while Cosmos chains typically have 50-175 validators per chain.

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最終更新: 2026/4/3