AIA Chain: POS, AI, and Financial Payments
  • Summary
  • Introduction
  • Why Decentralization Matters
  • Introduction to AIA Chain
  • Why the World Needs AIA Chain
  • Key Features
  • How AIA Chain Works
    • Elements of AIA Chain
    • AIA Chain Token
    • Other Digital Assets
    • AIA Chain Platform
    • AIA Chain Development Suite
  • AIA Chain Performance
  • Consensus Mechanism
    • APoS
    • AISN
  • Economics
    • Token Supply and Issuance Strategy
    • AIA Token Issuance Mechanism and Strategy
      • Initial Token Issuance (ICO) and Other Issuance Methods:
      • Block Rewards:
      • Lock-Up and Unlocking Strategy:
  • Market Cap and Fully Diluted Valuation (FDV)
    • Market Cap
    • Circulation Rate
    • Growth Potential Analysis
  • General Token Issuance Principles
  • Supply and Inflation
  • AIA Chain Economic Design Principles
  • AIA Chain Economic Model Overview
    • Economic Stakeholders
    • Validator Rewards
    • Operational Requirements
    • Contract Rewards
  • Economic Model Overview
    • Blockchain Overview
    • AIA’s Value Mission - Simplifying Success
      • AI Integration
    • AIA Consensus Mechanism - Genesis Coin Minting Rights
    • Token Allocation for Computing Power
      • Token Holding Power
    • Promotion Power
    • AISN Promotional Computing Power Algorithm Demonstration
    • AISN Mechanism Destruction
    • AIA Ecosystem Development
  • Cross-Chain
  • Meta-Transactions
  • AIA Chain Roadmap
  • AIA Chain Support Program
    • Operational Support
      • Seed Investment
      • Mentorship
      • Extensive Network
  • Relevant Support Program Tracks
  • Advantages of AIA in Financial Payments
  • Summary
    • Maintaining Oversight
    • Technical Governance
    • Future of AIA Chain
    • Participate in AIA Chain's Test Environment
    • Connect with Us on Social Media
  • Disclaimer
    • Notice
    • AIA Chain Token Disclaimer
      • Information Provision Purpose
    • AIA Chain Company and Platform Trademarks
Powered by GitBook
On this page
  1. AIA Chain Economic Model Overview

Validator Rewards

As part of the "Proof of Stake" system, the AIA Chain platform ensures security by requiring validators to lock up a portion of their AIA tokens as collateral. This deposit guarantees good behavior and helps prevent Sybil attacks. If validators produce invalid blocks or create an alternative chain (e.g., for double spending), they will lose a part of their staked tokens. Validator selection is determined by the "Proof of Stake Threshold" model, which sets the minimum number of tokens required to be allocated a validator "seat." This auction aims to provide fair (equal opportunity) allocation and allows as many participants as possible to engage in the network's validation process, thereby achieving meaningful decentralization. Validators can expect to participate in the validation process proportionate to their share of the total stake in the network. Each validator might take on one of the following roles:

  1. Block Producer

  2. Producer of Blocks

  3. Hidden Validator

Regardless of their assigned role, validators' rewards are proportional to their totaetwork. This means there is no minimum threshold required to become a validator. By producing blocks and securing the network while ensuring data availability. Validators are chosen on an epoch basis, meaning each must perform an equal amount of work in validating blocks, providing data availability, and producing blocks. Rewards are distributed within each epoch and proportional to each participant’s stake. All transaction fees collected over time (minus a portion allocated as contract rebates) are burned by the system. Inflationary rewards are paid to validators regardless of the collected or burned fees. This means that the overall system inflation decreases proportionally to the amount of fees paid to the system. If network usage fees exceed the system's inflation rate, the system can turn deflationary.

PreviousEconomic StakeholdersNextOperational Requirements

Last updated 7 months ago