MySoloPool Trust Center
We operate Bitcoin solo mining infrastructure with a bias toward observable facts: public stats pages, reproducible setups, and clear language around risk and payouts.
Fees & payouts
- Pool fee. The pool fee is published on the homepage and in Stratum documentation (currently 3% on block reward when a miner finds a block with a winning solo share). Reward splits are summarized alongside live coinbase sizing on-product.
- When fees apply. Fees apply in the payout path associated with successful block attribution for your Bitcoin address—you do not prepay subscription fees to point hashrate at the pool.
- Visibility. Use pool statistics, blocks, and the address dashboard to corroborate what you observe on miners and on-chain explorers.
Infrastructure & monitoring
Operators monitor Stratum ingestion, upstream Bitcoin node connectivity, job refresh cadence for templates, dashboard latency, and error budgets for API availability. Detailed architecture diagrams are intentionally limited for abuse resistance, but the live product surfaces latency-sensitive signals (statistics refresh, websocket updates, miner appearance time) miners can sanity-check continuously.
Security & abuse
- API and operator surfaces are partitioned from public dashboards; miners connect with standard mining credentials conventions (Bitcoin address as username).
- We discourage password reuse on rental integrations and advise hardware wallet policies for payouts.
- If you observe anomalous Stratum redirects or impersonation domains, route them through contact immediately.
Support & incident communication
For operational issues, miners should open a ticket via contact including address, approximate start time, and miner model. During incidents we prioritize factual status updates paired with reversible mitigations rather than speculative ETAs—check this page alongside social channels mirrored from Hashrate Farm announcements when applicable.
Known limitations
- Solo mining probabilities remain low for typical home-scale hashrate; dashboards visualize progress but cannot change network odds.
- Third-party rented hashrate adds counterparty timing risk—see playbooks rather than relying on anecdotes.
- Wallet privacy and mempool policy choices remain the miner's responsibility after payout broadcast.