Svmuu News: According to the latest research from the Cambridge Centre for Alternative Finance, approximately 31% of Ethereum node activity is located in the United States, while another 39% is distributed across the European Union (excluding the United Kingdom), indicating that the geographic distribution of Ethereum nodes remains relatively concentrated in Western countries.
Alexander Neumuller, the lead researcher, noted that while node distribution is not currently concentrated in a single country, it relies heavily on a small number of cloud service providers, including Hetzner, Amazon, AWS, and OVH.It is worth noting that the Ethereum network does not require half of the validators to fail before issues arise; if more than one-third of validators go offline simultaneously, the network may be unable to complete the finalization of block checkpoints.Neumuller pointed out that there is no one-to-one correspondence between nodes and validators; a single node may run multiple validators. Therefore, it is currently impossible to precisely determine the actual impact of a failure at a specific node or service provider on the validation network.
In addition, the study reassessed energy consumption following the Ethereum Merge.Data shows that Ethereum’s current annual energy consumption is approximately 7.9 GWh, equivalent to about 1 megawatt of continuous power—only about 0.02% of pre-Merge levels, representing a reduction of approximately 99.98%. Currently, the Ethereum network uses sustainable energy for more than 56% of its power needs, which is higher than the global average.
The study also points out that client software centralization is another potential risk; if a vulnerability were to arise in a dominant client, it could affect a large number of network participants. The report was published by the Cambridge Centre for Alternative Finance and supported by the Ethereum Foundation. (The)
Disclaimer:All content on this platform is sourced from the internet and is provided for informational purposes only. None of the content represents the views of this site, nor does it constitute investment advice. Please exercise caution when investing.
Cambridge Study: The U.S. Hosts About 31% of Ethereum Nodes; More Than One-Third of Nodes Are Offline or Affect Final Confirmation
Disclaimer: This content reflects only the author’s personal views and does not constitute any investment or financial advice. If you discover any content that violates regulations,Click to Report
24H Trending
-
1
With cumulative losses of $4.89 million, a trader opened a $5.43 million BTC long position with 40x leverage
-
2
THOREUM Coin Analysis: Hyper-Deflationary Mechanism, Multiple Iterations, and Future Outlook
-
3
Investing in Bitcoin: An In-Depth Analysis of Opportunities, Risks, and Market Overview
-
4
What Is Dogecoin? An In-Depth Analysis of Where to Buy It, Its Risks, and Its Value Prospects
-
5
The U.S. spot Bitcoin ETF saw net outflows of $4.5 billion in June, marking its worst monthly performance since its launch.
-
6
Ethereum PoS Consensus Mechanism: A Look Back at the "Merge" Upgrade and Its Current Impact
-
7
TokenPocket Wallet: Guide to Adding and Sending BNB
-
8
Tim Draper Reveals Why He Missed the Opportunity to Invest in Coinbase, Believing It Is Too Early for the Crypto Market to Go Mainstream
-
9
What Is Gagapay Network (GTA Coin)? Project Background and Token Overview
-
10
CASHCAT's market cap has fallen below $100 million, with a 24-hour decline of more than 30%
Recommended Reading








