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Solo Mining Pools

So, you got your bitaxe or other solo miner, but what now? Well, set it up and point it to a mining pool, of course. But you might ask yourself which one to use. In this post, we recommend pools for bitcoin solo miners which are all community maintained and offer solo mining with zero fees. Including our own, self-hosted mining pool! 😀

Public Pool Stratum tcp URL: public-pool.io
Port: 21496
The original public pool, maintained by the creator of the public pool software. This pool is the most widely used and allows you to engage in solo Bitcoin mining with straightforward setup and zero fees.

Go Brrr Pool Stratum tcp URL:
Port: 3333
Our fork of the original public pool offers zero fee mining and is hosted in a high bandwith location in Germany to provide improved performance for European solo miners. We created our own version of a Bitcoin Core container to ensure ZMQ support, and our pool has been running stable with almost no downtime since August 2024.

Noderunners Pool Stratum tcp URL: pool.noderunners.network
Port: 3333
Noderunners run Miners too! This is the mining pool of our Dutch friends, the Noderunners, hosted in the Netherlands, it’s offering solo mining with zero fees. The frontend is part of their awesome community website, Noderunners.network

Ckpool Solo Stratum tcp URL: solo.ckpool.org
Port: 3333
The longest running bitcoin solo mining pool to our knowledge is from ckpooldev, block 853742 was mined via ckpool. This pool takes a flat 2% fee

Satoshi Radio Pool Stratum tcp URL: pool.satoshiradio.nl
Port: 3333
The solo pool created by our friends at Satoshi Radio NL, which are running a version of CKpool, so it might incur a 2% fee, we couldn’t find any concrete information about this on their website at the time of writing this post.

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The bullish case for Noderunners

Now that privacy is on the verge of being outlawed is the best time there has ever been to set up and run your own Bitcoin node!

This is probably going to sound like a sales pitch because it’s coming from us, but that’s really not the intention of this post. It doesn’t matter which node implementation you choose, just choose the one you want or whatever is the most convenient for you to get started with.

Run Bitcoin Core, run BitcoinKnots run start9labs, run BtcpayServer, runcitadel, my god even umbrel if you must. The important thing is that it’s YOUR node. Think about it. We have ~18000 Bitcoin nodes online which is a laughable number when you compare it to the number of people on Nostr, Bitcoin talk and Twitter. At least three of those 18k are mine, and I suspect more people run multiple nodes, so the actual number of noderunning individuals is probably another magnitude smaller.

These Noderunners are serving the network, but much more importantly, they can verify that they get real Bitcoin when receiving UTXOs. And they can do so independently, over Tor, which means that, to this day, no one can stop them from doing so. If you don’t use your own node, you’re using someone else’s node.

With privacy services shutting down and wallet apps disappearing from appstores in certain jurisdictions, having your own money transmitter might not only come in handy, it could be the only way to transact freely if you have to.

No one knows what’s going to happen next, but don’t make the mistake to think the EU won’t follow suit. Be prepared for the moment when your favorite wallet shuts down. Practice recovery with SparrowWallet or a similarly capable wallet, (good luck finding one) which allows you to connect to a node which is behind Tor. Preferably your own, but Uncle Jim Nodes work too. Ask your friends if you can’t run your own. That’s what friends are for too, they share nodes.

At this point in time, individual Noderunners have not been targeted, because it’s hard and the effort mostly outweighs the benefits for the government, so far…

And with every node coming online, it gets harder to take Bitcoin down. Which in return strengthens each and every one of us. A critical mass of NodeRunners is an unstoppable force, we don’t claim to know when that critical mass is reached, but it’s certainly not 18000.

So, what to do now? Bust out your Raspberry Pis, RockPros, old Laptops, iMacs, PCs. whatever you have and get to work. Build a node, run it and learn how to connect to it. Do it before you need it!

Too dystopian for you? GFY and take a look around. It’s going to get worse before it can get better.

Good night.