ABOUT / SUBSOCKET.IO / UPDATED JUNE 2026
About Subsocket — DigiByte Hashrate Chart and DGB Mining Data Resource
Subsocket publishes hashrate data guides for DigiByte mining. The focus is the DGB hashrate chart — a multi-algorithm view that aggregates five independent proof-of-work streams into one display, and is routinely misread by both participants and operators. Every guide on this site is built around one question: can this specific DGB mining claim be verified against public pool data and on-chain difficulty records, or is the operator the only source of truth?
What we cover
The main reference on this site is the DGB hashrate chart guide on the homepage — how to read per-algorithm hashrate data, what DigiByte's MultiShield difficulty adjustment means for return projections, how to verify a pool address, and what structural patterns appear in DGB mining offers that misrepresent hashrate figures.
The guides cover how DigiByte's five-algorithm design works when it operates correctly, how the per-algorithm difficulty adjustment mechanism differs from single-algorithm networks, and what specific signals — pool address availability, algorithm specification, fixed return claims, difficulty-blind projections — separate auditable mining operations from unverifiable ones.
Who this is for
Anyone evaluating a DGB mining offer — whether described as a cloud hashrate contract, a cooperative GPU mining arrangement, or a DigiByte staking product — before committing capital. The guides assume intermediate familiarity with crypto: you know what a wallet address is, but you may not know how MultiShield difficulty adjustment works or why algorithm-specific hardware matters for DGB mining returns.
Site sections
— DGB hashrate chart guide: four data points — algorithm layer, difficulty adjustment, pool attribution, hardware match.
— Red flags: fixed return figures on variable-output hardware, absent pool addresses, algorithm mismatch, and aggregate charts used as individual evidence.
— Algorithm comparison: hardware requirements, ASIC-resistance status, and difficulty mechanics for each of DigiByte's five mining algorithms.
Contact and corrections
If a hashrate figure, pool statistic, or algorithm specification on this site is wrong, use the contact page to flag it. Include the exact URL and a dated source. A documented correction from a verifiable source will be reflected in the guide.