Your comments

Ah, now I get what you mean. No, Monero transactions are private by design, therefore transaction details do not contain the actual addresses. When you look closely, none of the "Key" values under "Outputs" is an actual Monero Address.

It's just an intermittent display issue as we are currently working on web-frontend improvements. Your shares are fine.

What is your wallet address?

The pool has to pre-generate the DAG. Estimated time left 5mins.

It's currently not possible but I'm planning to implement this over the coming weekend. Out of curiosity, do you want the limit lowered or increased?

Hallo Hendrik


Du hast am 16.03.2018 aufgehört zu minen. Daher sind Deine Shares von den Minern verdrängt worden die am Ball geblieben sind. Genau so funktioniert PPLNS (Pay-per-last-N-shares). PPLNS hat eine gewisse Toleranz für sporadische Unterbrechungen, allerdings nicht für mehrere Tage. Das würde bei jedem anderen Pool exakt genauso passieren.


https://coinfoundry.org/de/faq#payments


LG

Oliver

Very simple for these reasons:


  1. The first block effort was 98%. Which means, the pool did not hit the full PPLNS window during payout calculation, resulting in the leftover 2% remaining in the pools wallet undistributed. This can only happen for the very first couple blocks of a new pool. Normally I'd distribute the leftover block rewards manually to all miners who contributed to it but since the the amount was so tiny, I didn't do it this time.
  2. You should never try to directly correlate block rewards with payments. When payments are calculated miner rewards got into the pseudo-wallets maintained by the pool. For most blocks, the miner-wallets do not reach the pool's payout-limit and thus do not get transferred to the miner's real wallet, thus giving the impression that the pool kept it when it in fact didn't. This effect gets emphasized on pools with low hashrate where you have a high turnaround of miners joining, mining for a while, getting impatient and leaving forever. When the block is finally found, they get their cut but since the amount is so low their account stays below the payout limit, effectively locking those funds forever.

That's how it works. When processing payments everyone's shares for the block being paid get processed one by one. Depending on the length of the last round, some left over shares will be retained for possible future payments (if the next round is very short for example), while the rest gets deleted.


https://coinfoundry.org/faq#payments