Gigi | May 13, 2021
Decentralized systems, by definition, do not have a single source of truth.
Satoshi’s breakthrough was to build a system that allows all participants to zero in on the same truth independently. Proof of work is what allows this to happen.
The point of proof of work is to create an irrefutable history. If two histories compete, the one with the most work embedded in it wins.
The chain with the most work is the truth, by definition. This is what we call Nakamoto consensus.
Why does this work?
In short: because work requires energy. You can’t cheat it. You can’t argue with it. You can’t lie about it. The proof that you did the work is self-evident in the outcome of the work.
In Bitcoin, work is computation. Not any kind of computation, but computation that has no shortcut: guessing. There is no shortcut because there is no progress. Every guess stands on its own.
The beautiful thing is that the work itself is embedded in the solution. The data speaks for itself. The map is the territory. There is no external source of truth required. The work is implicit in the data due to the probabilistic nature of guessing.
Other mechanisms, such as proof of stake, don’t have this property. You can never be sure that what you are looking at is actually the truth since there is no external cost to create an alternative truth.
Computation is the only bridge between the realm of information to the physical realm. When dealing with information, all we have is information and the transformation of information: computation.
Computation requires energy. Energy is the bridge. Energy is real.
Remove this bridge to the physical world and you will stay in fantasy land: you can’t tell what actually happened. You will have to trust others to tell you what happened. You can’t verify it yourself. You have to rely on trust.
Proof of stake has plenty of other problems, such as fair validator selection (who decides?), naturally centralizing effects (more stake = more reward = more stake), and having no natural resistance to timestamp manipulation attacks, for example.
Proof of work solves these exact problems. It decentralizes the selection process, creates physical proof of what happened, has real externalized costs, and decentralizes time. Bitcoin is Time
The question of whether proof of work is wasteful or not can’t be asked without understanding the problem it solves. Understanding the problem properly will lead you to the conclusion that there is no other way to solve it in a trustless manner.
Thus, the question becomes: how useful is trustless digital sound money? Is it worth the energy expenditure?
For fridges, cars, smartphones, and a myriad of other things, society answers this question in the affirmative.
For Bitcoin, those who understand the societal benefits of sound and censorship-resistant money answer in the affirmative.
To summarize: proof of work is not only useful but absolutely essential. Trustless digital money can’t work without it. You always need an anchor to the physical realm. Without this anchor, a truthful history that is self-evident is impossible. Energy is the only anchor we have.
Proof of work = trust physics to determine what happened.
Proof of stake = trust humans to determine what happened.
Addendum: I have a lot of sympathy for everyone who thinks that Bitcoin is wasteful. I thought so too, and I had to shift my perspective. Like most people, I didn’t know anything about (sound) money.
Bitcoin’s Energy Consumption
Addendum, part two: The problem of agreeing on a common time in an adversarial decentralized system can’t be solved precisely, not even in theory. Proof of work is a practical, probabilistic solution to this intractable problem.
Ledgers require time, and time requires heat
Addendum, part three: I wrote “trustless” for brevity. There is no such thing. It is always about the minimization of trust.
(Reflections on “Don’t Trust. Verify”)
Addendum, part four: It should go without saying that energy expenditure doesn’t equal carbon footprint and that both are decoupled from transaction throughput.
See this thread by @LynAldenContact:
Bitcoin’s total energy usage is determined primarily from market capitalization and difficulty adjustments, not transaction volume. In other words, the marginal bitcoin transaction/spending choice has virtually no impact on bitcoin’s total energy usage… whole thread on Twitter