FAQs

What are the risks associated with sequencer mining?

In case of bad performance or malicious acting, the particular sequencer pool participant’s locked tokens would be slashed.

In what cases a particular sequencer is considered malicious?

Cases would include but not limited to:

  1. Transaction manipulation (MEV or sandwiching)

  2. Malicious Execution Result Modification: If a node modifies the execution result of a block, it will fail validation by other sequencers. This will cause other sequencers to stop producing blocks. The node will then be forced to produce a new block with the correct execution result.

How is “bad performance” defined? Cases would include but not limited to:

  1. Failing to produce a block during a certain period of time

  2. Slow performance: if the sequencer fails to produce the blocks vastly behind the average timing of other sequencers

  3. Multiple Node Outages: If multiple nodes go offline at the same time, and they are all malicious, they should be punished more severely. This includes nodes that represent more than 1/3 of the total number of sequencers

  4. Accumulated Unpacked Blocks:

If a node does not pack a block for a certain number of transactions, other sequencers can vote to slash it.

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