The Ethereum ecosystem has seen only 226 validators slashed since the launch of the Beacon Chain on Dec. 1, 2022 — amounting to just 0.04% of 524,060 validators, according to an Ethereum core developer.
Slashing is a process where a validator breaches the proof-of-stake consensus rules, which often results in the removal of that validator from the network and slashing a portion of the staked Ether (ETH) that the validator provided as collateral.
Such slim odds of being slashed were highlighted by Ethereum core developer “Superphiz” in a Feb. 23 Twitter post, which suggests that people shouldn’t be concerned about staking ETH for that particular reason.
226 out of 523,000 validators on the beacon chain have been slashed. This is nothing to lose sleep over. Many slashings have occurred during failed system migration. Here are four emerging best practice tips to avoid this:https://t.co/wleR4YQmDD
The developer also explained “four emerging best practices” to reduce those odds even further.
One of these practices was to wipe any existing chain data on old staking machines and to reinstall and reformat the validator where necessary, said Superphiz, noting that many slashings occur due to “failed systems migrations.”
Superphiz then suggested using “doppelganger detection” — which checks whether the validator's keys are active before starting the validation process.
While this can impact validator uptime, he explained that “perfect uptime” isn’t worth getting slashed in the grand scheme of things:
The developer said it is also worth watching buffers and logs on the Beacon Chain to become aware of any potential problems that may arise.
If something feels wrong, Superphiz suggested “unplugging everything” and to “come back” when the
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