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Solana lost more than half of its validators in 3 years
Source: Criptonoticias
Original Title: Solana lost more than half of its validators in 3 years
Original Link:
The number of Solana validators has dropped sharply over the past three years.
From March 2023 to today, the network went from more than 2,500 active operators to around 800, a reduction of more than 68%.
The chart below shows the decrease in the total number of validators on Solana:
A validator is an operator who runs a node and participates in the process that confirms transactions on a network like Solana.
In this way, they sign blocks and help maintain the integrity of the system. Each validator brings diversity and reduces the risk of a single entity gaining too much control.
A less alarming perspective from within the ecosystem
Amid concern over the shrinking number of validators, some participants in the Solana ecosystem have offered a different perspective.
One of them said: “I’ll say it again: having ‘sybils’ drop like flies is a GOOD thing. Having 800 reliable validators is better than having 3,000 ‘sybils.’”
A sybil is a validator that pretends to be many different identities to influence a network, but is actually controlled by a single entity.
Thus, the argument made by this user is that a reduction can be healthy if it means removing nodes that don’t really contribute to decentralization.
Other participants, however, take a more nuanced view. A team developing infrastructure for Solana, focused on operational tools for nodes and network services, said: “We personally know the teams that are shutting down. Most of them are not ‘sybils.’”
According to them, a significant portion of the validators leaving the network are genuine operators who decided to withdraw for economic or technical reasons.
These perspectives show that the drop in the total number of validators does not have a single explanation.
Although the current number is lower, according to these opinions, the real impact on decentralization depends on how many independent validators remain active and how power is distributed among them.
The debate will remain open as Solana works to reduce operating costs and offer better tools for those supporting its infrastructure.