Ethereum Classic: Proof-of-Work Smart Contracts and Global Censorship Resistance

Published on ethereumclassic.org November 17, 2025

Ethereum Classic is currently the largest proof-of-work smart contract platform. The network operates at roughly 300 terahashes per second (TH/s), according to public hashrate trackers such as 2Miners. This represents approximately 90 to 95 percent of all Ethash or Etchash compatible hashing power across all networks.

This level of mining participation has practical implications. It supports a permissionless environment where individuals and organizations anywhere in the world can participate without identification or prior approval. It also strengthens resistance to censorship because mining hardware and miners themselves are geographically dispersed.

Mining without permission

Anyone with compatible hardware can mine Ethereum Classic. The project’s mining guide at ethereumclassic.org/mining explains how to download mining software, connect to a pool, and begin contributing computational work. No registration, identity verification, or staking commitment is required.

Miners can operate on home computers, small rigs, or professional farms. They may connect through privacy-enhancing routing tools such as TOR, work through international mining pools, or mine solo. The protocol measures only proof-of-work computation and does not track the identity or location of the individual producing it.In contrast, proof-of-stake systems require participants to lock assets in validator nodes. On Ethereum, this means holding 32 ETH to run a validator. Most participants use staking services provided by companies such as Coinbase, Kraken, or Lido, which operate within regulatory jurisdictions. These organizations maintain offices, personnel, and identifiable corporate structures.

Censorship concerns after the Tornado Cash sanctions

When the U.S. Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control sanctioned Tornado Cash in August 2022, the effects were visible across the Ethereum ecosystem. Research from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York documented that a noticeable share of Ethereum blocks began excluding transactions from sanctioned addresses. The report is available here: https://www.newyorkfed.org/research/staff_reports/sr1112

Flashbots, a leading block-building infrastructure provider, added filters for sanctioned addresses. The Block reported that at least 23 percent of Ethereum blocks in October 2022 fell into this category:

After the sanctions announcement, Ethermine, which had been the largest Ethereum mining pool before the Merge, stopped processing Tornado Cash transactions as reported by CryptoSlate

Infrastructure providers also responded. Infura and Alchemy restricted API access to Tornado Cash contracts, and Circle froze USDC held in sanctioned addresses. These actions created cascading effects that influenced validator behavior.

Why this matters for credible neutrality

The response to the Tornado Cash sanctions highlighted an important point about privacy and financial technology. Tools such as mixers and privacy protocols are not inherently criminal. Individuals and organizations use them for many ordinary reasons, including protecting salary information, safeguarding business activity, shielding wallet addresses from public association, or maintaining privacy while transacting in politically sensitive environments. Law enforcement agencies already focus their efforts on the parts of the system where oversight is practical. These are the entry and exit points where digital assets are exchanged for fiat currency, such as centralized exchanges, custodians, and payment processors. These organizations maintain compliance programs, conduct reporting, and cooperate with investigations. Monitoring these regulated entities allows authorities to trace illicit activity without requiring the underlying blockchain to censor or restrict protocol-level transactions.

A blockchain network that maintains integrity at the consensus layer supports this balance. When the network remains neutral, it includes all valid transactions according to the protocol’s rules, regardless of their origin or social interpretation. This approach creates a consistent and predictable execution environment. Participants can rely on the network to process transactions fairly, and regulators still retain the ability to enforce laws at the surrounding on-ramps and off-ramps. Credible neutrality comes from the idea that the network itself should not interpret intent or apply policy but should focus on verifying validity.

How proof-of-work responds differently

Ethereum Classic miners are not organized around validator sets, corporate entities, or identifiable operators. The mining ecosystem follows economic incentives rather than membership requirements. Several characteristics contribute to this:

No identity requirements

Mining does not require formal registration. Participants can redirect their hashrate through different pools or network routes with minimal friction.

Geographic distribution

Miners cluster where electricity costs are favorable. Regions such as Iceland, Kazakhstan, Texas, and parts of China and South America host mining operations because of local energy conditions. This geographic variety spreads risk and reduces the chance that a single government can influence a large percentage of hashrate.

Low switching costs

If a miner encounters regulatory pressure in one jurisdiction, they can move their hashrate to a pool hosted elsewhere. The hardware works on any Etchash chain, and miners frequently switch pools for operational reasons.

Hardware diversity

Ethereum Classic supports mining with both GPUs and ASICs. Etchash was introduced in ECIP-1099 (“Thanos”) to slow the rate at which the DAG file grows. This keeps older 4 GB and 6 GB graphics cards useful for longer periods: https://ecips.ethereumclassic.org/ECIPs/ecip-1099

ASIC manufacturers such as Bitmain, Jasminer, and iPollo all produce miners compatible with Ethereum Classic. Examples include:

  • iPollo V-series: https://ipollo.com/products/v1-mini-etchash
  • Jasminer X16-Q Pro: https://www.jasminer.com/products/x16-q-pro
  • Bitmain Antminer E9 models: https://shop.bitmain.com/products/antminer-e9

Since GPU mining remains common, the network does not rely solely on specialized hardware that could be restricted through export policy.

Current mining landscape

When Ethereum transitioned to proof-of-stake in September 2022, most Ethash miners migrated to Ethereum Classic. Hashrate rose from approximately 65 TH/s to more than 275 TH/s within days, a shift covered by CoinDesk

Today, miners distribute their hashrate across several pools such as:

2Miners (https://2miners.com/etc-mining-pool)

F2Pool (https://www.f2pool.com/coin/etc)Hiveon (https://hiveon.com/pool/etc)

MiningPoolStats tracks dozens of active pools: https://miningpoolstats.stream/ethereumclassic

Solo mining is still practical for small and mid-size operators. Sites such as https://etc.solopool.org provide estimates for finding blocks with moderate hashrate levels.

Security considerations

Because Ethereum Classic dominates the available Ethash and Etchash hashrate, acquiring sufficient hardware for an attack is difficult. NiceHash removed support for Etchash after the ECIP-1099 upgrade, which limits the ability to rent short-term hashrate.

Performing a majority attack would require acquiring a large number of ASICs or GPUs, which involves high capital cost and lengthy procurement times. The attacker would also suffer opportunity costs because mining produces a steady revenue stream.

Block rewards currently total approximately 2.56 ETC per block, and around 6,000 blocks are mined each day. At an ETC price near $16, this results in roughly $250,000 to $300,000 in daily miner revenue. Any attack must exceed both capital and opportunity costs for participants already earning predictable returns.

Position within the broader ecosystem

Ethereum Classic offers smart contract functionality with a proof-of-work security model. Bitcoin also uses proof-of-work but does not provide a general-purpose execution environment. Ethereum provides a rich smart contract ecosystem but relies on proof-of-stake consensus.

ETC remains EVM-compatible.

Development guides are available at: https://ethereumclassic.org/development/guides

Applications written for Ethereum can generally be deployed on Ethereum Classic without modification. The difference lies in the consensus mechanism and associated security characteristics.

Conclusion

Ethereum Classic demonstrates that a proof-of-work smart contract platform can maintain strong mining participation and broad geographic distribution even after the shift of Ethereum to proof-of-stake. The network’s mining architecture encourages anonymous participation, supports both GPUs and ASICs, and spans many jurisdictions. These characteristics create structural resistance to censorship and central control.

The platform trades higher energy use and a smaller ecosystem for these properties. For applications that require permissionless participation and resilience to regulatory pressure, Ethereum Classic offers a distinctive set of features within the family of EVM-compatible blockchains.

Why Ethereum Classic Endures

Published on ethereumclassic.org October 15, 2025

I was there when we made the choice to defend immutability. It wasn’t easy, convenient, or even popular. It was the moment we decided that the principle of “code is law” was not just a slogan it was a moral commitment to the permanence of truth. When others rewrote history to protect the few, we wrote a declaration of independence and chose to protect the many. That decision gave birth to Ethereum Classic. It was a defining act of conviction, and it remains the reason I believe this network still matters. In those early days, we weren’t idealists chasing price charts; we were builders and miners defending an idea that once a transaction is recorded on a public ledger, it should remain there forever, unedited and uncorrupted. It was not rebellion for rebellion’s sake. It was stewardship. We chose to protect a foundation that technology itself depends upon: the ability to trust the record without trusting the recorder.

Nearly a decade later, the landscape has evolved. Blockchains have matured, institutions have awakened, and the lines between cryptography, finance, and artificial intelligence are beginning to blur. What hasn’t changed is the importance of security and truth. These two principles, immutability and proof of work, remain the bedrock of Ethereum Classic.

I want to dispel a persistent myth: that Ethereum Classic is a “stable” chain that should never change. Stability does not mean stagnation. Every system that survives does so by adapting intelligently, not by resisting change blindly. The DAG continues to grow, new EIPs emerge, and vulnerabilities must be patched. A living network breathes, evolves, and learns. Ethereum Classic has undergone continuous development since its inception. We have modernized, optimized, and fought for compatibility while preserving our philosophical independence. To pretend that nothing should ever change is to misunderstand what it takes to stay secure in a world that never stops moving. Technology only moves forward. The question is whether we shape that future consciously, or allow others to define it for us.

Ethereum Classic can no longer live in the shadow of its sibling. Ethereum has pursued a very different path that’s defined by experimentation in consensus, scaling through rollups, and economic policies driven by governance rather than principle. That is their choice. Our choice is different.We must rise as a sovereign chain. Independent in our roadmap, self-sustaining in our governance, and confident in our role as the apex of proof-of-work security. The power to feed us through upstream repositories is also the power to starve us. We cannot depend indefinitely on the forks of Geth or Besu that now serve different architectural philosophies. Their shift toward RISC-like execution and consensus separation introduces risks we cannot inherit blindly. We need our own consensus client and the ability to support multiple execution clients. The future of ETC depends on this independence.

Sovereignty means more than code ownership. It means control over OUR shared destiny. It means that when miners commit their hash power, they are securing the principle that security earned through computation cannot be substituted by trust in validators or committees. To mine ETC is to participate in the most direct form of democracy we have where work itself is the vote, and energy the price of participation.

We are entering a new era for digital assets. The “post-genius” phase of crypto is upon us. Gone are the days when markets were defined by speculation and slogans. Today, regulated virtual asset service providers are licensed and operating globally. Banks, funds, and custodians are developing digital asset strategies, not as side experiments but as pillars of their balance sheets. Within the next 18–24 months, nearly every financial institution will confront a moment of clarity: how to manage custody, treasury, and intelligence for digital assets within compliant frameworks. After that everyone on earth will have to know something about safekeeping of their identity, money and objects.

This is where Ethereum Classic’s true value will be understood. Not as a meme or a nostalgia trip, but as infrastructure. ETC has the security of real miners running real hardware across the globe. Its state cannot be manipulated without a valid transaction. Its ledger is transparent, auditable, and final. For institutions seeking a base layer that embodies the same assurances as Bitcoin, with the additional flexibility of the EVM, Ethereum Classic is the rational choice.

I believe ETC will emerge as a base layer for agentic systems like a2a ap2, decentralized custodial networks, and proof-of-work–anchored Layer 2s. Developers and enterprises alike will build bridges and rollups to leverage its finality and its neutrality. Privacy preserving apps will flourish without censorship. In a world increasingly reliant on synthetic intelligence and automated actors, the need for an incorruptible execution layer will only grow. Proof of work will remain the standard of integrity.

No system can thrive without an economy that rewards those who maintain and advance it. I believe in a community-governed treasury, funded transparently through protocol-level mechanisms. The base fee model offers a path forward, a portion of transaction fees can support ongoing development, infrastructure maintenance, and ecosystem grants. This isn’t charity. This is self-preservation.

A network that rewards builders, researchers, educators, and infrastructure providers ensures its own longevity. Governance should not rest with a foundation that claims neutrality while wielding control. Instead, ETC’s treasury can be managed through decentralized, auditable proposals; allowing the community itself to decide which initiatives deserve funding. This balance between autonomy and accountability is the next logical step in our evolution.

To move forward, we must make decisions with discipline. First, we must agree on what defines the next era both in name and in purpose. Whether the next fork is called Olympia or something else, it must symbolize more than a software upgrade. It must mark a cultural renewal. We need to align on scope, prioritize security, and adopt a structured process to agree, build, test, and release. That cycle (ie transparent, predictable, and repeatable) will build the trust of institutions and miners alike.

The work ahead is not glamorous, it is essential. Every 14 seconds, the network fights for its life. Each block mined is a reaffirmation of belief. A heartbeat powered by thousands of machines and the people who run them. We cannot afford complacency. We owe it to the miners who secure the chain, to the developers who maintain it, and to the investors who believe in it to keep advancing with clarity and conviction.

My vision is of a world where humans and autonomous agents coexist in digital economies safeguarded by cryptography. In that world, what we now call “a node” becomes fully modular: a combination of consensus, execution, and intelligence layers cooperating seamlessly. Ethereum Classic can serve as the security backbone of that future, anchoring distributed systems with the same honesty that defined its birth.

I see a future where ETC can be a reference point for institutional custody and digital asset integrity. A chain respected for its security, its simplicity, and its refusal to compromise on first principles. A place where miners, developers, and investors work in unison to maintain an incorruptible record of human and machine interaction. Ethereum Classic’s story has always been one of resilience. We were forged in conflict, sustained by conviction, and defined by proof. Now, we have the opportunity to evolve into the secure backbone for the next generation of decentralized systems.

Immutability was our origin. Sovereignty is our future. Evolution is our path.

Forward, we must always move relentlessly forward.

This personal opinion was written with real human thumbs by:

Cody (dontpanic) Burns

forker of chains, decentralized troll emperor

written around block 23213619

bh:0xc96bc8304a64f6b6ce8d2ba693d2a6a8bcd061fb8ce0ab88fb882d96d2fea303

EthereumPoW abandoned

TL:DR: The team who tried to money grab during the merge ran out of money and abandoned the chain.

Ethereum Classic is still the worlds largest Proof of Work EVM network. Decentralized, immutable, and open for business.