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According to Polygon, “the same infrastructure used to power YouTube and Gmail” will help secure its network.
Polygon Labs announced on Sept. 29 that Google Cloud has joined the Polygon proof-of-stake network as a validator.
Google Cloud joins over 100 other validators verifying transactions on its layer-2 Ethereum network.
This month, @GoogleCloud became part of the decentralized validator set for Polygon PoS.
The same infrastructure used to power @YouTube and @gmail is now helping to secure the fast, low-cost, Ethereum-for-all Polygon protocol.
With 100+ validators securing the Polygon PoS…— Polygon (Labs) (@0xPolygonLabs) September 29, 2023
Per a post from Polygon Labs on the X platform (formerlly Twitter) announcing the partnership:
“The same infrastructure used to power @YouTube and @gmail is now helping to secure the fast, low-cost, Ethereum-for-all Polygon protocol.”
Validators on the Polygon network help secure the network by operating nodes, staking MATIC (MATIC), and participating in proof-of-stake consensus mechanics.
Separately, learn more about our work in the blockchain space, in an ongoing strategic collaboration with @0xPolygonLabs https://t.co/r6yAtUSXEc
— Google Cloud Singapore (@GoogleCloud_SG) September 29, 2023
The Google Cloud Singapore account confirmed on X that Google Cloud was “now serving as a validator on the Polygon PoS network,” adding that it would be “contributing to the network’s collective security, governance, and decentralization alongside 100+ other validators.”
Source: Polygon Staking
While many of Polygon’s validators are anonymous, Google Cloud joins Germany’s Deutsche Telekom, one of Europe’s largest telecommunications firms, on the network.
For its part, Google Cloud describes its relationship with Polygon Labs as “an ongoing strategic collaboration.” Alongside the announcement that it would be joining the network as a validator, Google Cloud Asia Pacific also released a YouTube video titled “Polygon Labs is solving for a Web3 future for all.”
Polygon Labs recently launched its “Polygon 2.0” initiative to update the Polygon network. As Cointelegraph reported, “Phase 0,” the current phase, features three Polygon Improvement Proposals, PIPs 17-19.
PIP 17 involves transitioning from MATIC to the new token POL, while PIPs 18 and 19 address supporting endeavors such as the technical description of POL and updating gas tokens. According to Polygon, these changes are slated to begin taking place in Q4 2023.
Related: Google Cloud adds 11 blockchains to data warehouse ‘BigQuery’
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