Cornell Professor Unveils 'Simple Yet Powerful' Consensus Protocols
Cornell University professor Emin Gun Sirer announced a new family of consensus protocols at Token Summit on Thursday.

A pseudonymous team of developers have created a family of new consensus protocols for blockchains.
Cornell University professor and blockchain researcher Emin Gun Sirer announced the new protocols Thursday at Token Summit III in New York, explaining that they combine what he referred to as the "classical consensus" and "Nakamoto consensus" models in blockchain network decision-making.
“The way this protocol works is incredibly simple yet incredibly powerful,” he said.
Sirer and his team have been working on the white paper for this protocol family for months, he said, but it was developed by a pseudonymous team called “Team Rocket” after the Pokemon characters.
Referred to as Snowflake, Snowball and Avalanche, the protocols randomly sample network participants, and ultimately choose a single result, Sirer said. “They rely on randomness and they rely on random interactions and yet they ensure after the interactions everyone has decided the same thing.”
According to the white paper:
“Inspired by gossip algorithms, this new family gains its safety through a deliberately metastable mechanism. Specifically, the system operates by repeatedly sampling the network at random, and steering the correct nodes towards the same outcome.”
Nakamoto consensus protocols (of which bitcoin is the best known) require miners to agree to a specific decision before it can be enacted, while classical consensus requires a two-thirds plus one majority, Sirer said during his talk.
However, not everyone agrees that this is a novel breakthrough.
Ethereum developer Vlad Zamfir said on Twitter that due to the nature of the protocols, they fail to combine “the best of Nakamoto consensus with the best of classical consensus” as Sirer asserted.
Zamfir, who is the leading researcher behind ethereum's upcoming proof-of-stake protocol Casper CBC, said the new protocols combine "the worst of both worlds," due to aspects of the code that could lead to weakened security.
“It's not asynchronously safe and it's probabilistic,” he said, later adding “We don't get to take a probabilistic model of the network for granted [in my opinion].”
William Mougayar and Emin Gün Sirer image by Nikhilesh De for CoinDesk
Higit pang Para sa Iyo
Protocol Research: GoPlus Security

Ano ang dapat malaman:
- As of October 2025, GoPlus has generated $4.7M in total revenue across its product lines. The GoPlus App is the primary revenue driver, contributing $2.5M (approx. 53%), followed by the SafeToken Protocol at $1.7M.
- GoPlus Intelligence's Token Security API averaged 717 million monthly calls year-to-date in 2025 , with a peak of nearly 1 billion calls in February 2025. Total blockchain-level requests, including transaction simulations, averaged an additional 350 million per month.
- Since its January 2025 launch , the $GPS token has registered over $5B in total spot volume and $10B in derivatives volume in 2025. Monthly spot volume peaked in March 2025 at over $1.1B , while derivatives volume peaked the same month at over $4B.
Higit pang Para sa Iyo
Coinbase Sees Crypto Recovery Ahead as Liquidity Improves and Fed Rate Cut Odds Climb

The crypto exchange also took note of a so-called AI bubble that continues to go strong and a weaker U.S. dollar.
Ano ang dapat malaman:
- Coinbase Institutional is seeing a potential December recovery in crypto, citing improving liquidity and a shift in macroeconomic conditions that could favor risk assets like bitcoin.
- The firm's optimism is driven by rising odds of Federal Reserve rate cuts, with markets pricing in a 93% chance easing next week, and improving liquidity conditions.
- Several recent institutional developments, including Vanguard's crypto ETF policy reversal and Bank of America's greenlighting of crypto allocations, have contributed to bitcoin's rebound from recent lows.










