
Responsibility of Validators
The liquidity delegated to validators may be used for slashing in case validators validated forged or censored message. In this case, anyone who had a financial loss due to validator misbehavior will be compensated by deBridge governance from the amount slashed from the validator’s collateral. Thus, in addition to reputational risks, validators are financially responsible for the proper operation of the protocol and its fault tolerance. There are two ways how validators can attract liquidity into collateral:- Validators stake their own liquidity into collateral
- Validators attract liquidity from delegators and share rewards paid by the protocol
Delegated Staking
Any user/wallet can increase the collateral of any validator if they believe that this validator is reliable, knows how to manage infrastructure, and won’t incur any breakdowns and delays in the processing and validation of transactions. The whitelist of assets that can be staked is managed by governance. Initially, onlyETH, USDT, USDC assets will be available for staking. Stablecoins allow hedging collateral during periods of market volatility to avoid shrinking of total collateral USD value during the bear market stages. If the user decides to unstake any amount of staked assets, a cooldown period of 14 days should pass from the time of the unstaking request to the moment the user is able to claim their assets. Later on, the cooldown period for unstaking will be reduced to 7 days. The cooldown period is needed for several reasons:- To avoid front-running, so that users do not stake opportunistically for a short period of time to capitalize on rewards during periods of high volumes
- To give governance a time to slash validator collateral before delegators unstake their liquidity. Governance can pause/renew new stakes/unstakes and ongoing cooldowns for specific validators or delegators. Also in case of failure, delegators who initiated unstaking (had active cooldown) before the timestamp of the incident will not be slashed