To expand on this below;

Den 18 apr. 2017 00:34 skrev "Natanael" <natanael.l@gmail.com>:
IMHO the best option if we change PoW is an algorithm that's moderately processing heavy (we still need reasonably fast verification) and which resists partial state reuse (not fast or fully "linear" in processing like SHA256) just for the sake of invalidating asicboost style attacks, and it should also have an existing reference implementation for hardware that's provably close in performance to the theoretical ideal implementation of the algorithm (in other words, one where we know there's no hidden optimizations). 

[...] The competition would mostly be about packing similar gate designs closely and energy efficiency. (Now that I think about it, the proof MAY have to consider energy use too, as a larger and slower but more efficient chip still is competitive in mining...) 

What matters for miners in terms of cost is primarily (correctly computed) hashes per joule (watt-seconds). The most direct proxy for this in terms of algorithm execution is the number of transistor (gate) activations per computed hash (PoW unit). 

To prove that an implementation is near optimal, you would show there's a minimum number of necessary transistor activations per computed hash, and that your implementation is within a reasonable range of that number. 

We also need to show that for a practical implementation you can't reuse much internal state (easiest way is "whitening" the block header, pre-hashing or having a slow hash with an initial whitening step of its own). This is to kill any ASICBOOST type optimization. Performance should be constant, not linear relative to input size. 

The PoW step should always be the most expensive part of creating a complete block candidate! Otherwise it loses part of its meaning. It should however still also be reasonably easy to verify. 

Given that there's already PoW ASIC optimizations since years back that use deliberately lossy hash computations just because those circuits can run faster (X% of hashes are computed wrong, but you get Y% more computed hashes in return which exceeds the error rate), any proof of an implementation being near optimal (for mining) must also consider the possibility of implementations of a design that deliberately allows errors just to reduce the total count of transistor activations per N amount of computed hashes. Yes, that means the reference implementation is allowed to be lossy. 

So for a reasonably large N (number of computed hashes, to take batch processing into consideration), the proof would show that there's a specific ratio for a minimum number of average gate activations per correctly computed hash, a smallest ratio = X number of gate activations / (N * success rate) across all possible implementations of the algorithm. And you'd show your implementation is close to that ratio. 

It would also have to consider a reasonable range of time-memory tradeoffs including the potential of precomputation. Hopefully we could implement an algorithm that effectively makes such precomputation meaningless by making the potential gain insignificant for any reasonable ASIC chip size and amount of precomputation resources. 

A summary of important mining PoW algorithm properties;

* Constant verification speed, reasonably fast even on slow hardware 

* As explained above, still slow / expensive enough to dominate the costs of block candidate creation

* Difficulty must be easy to adjust (no problem for simple hash-style algorithms like today) 

* Cryptographic strength, something like preimage resistance (the algorithm can't allow forcing a particular output, the chance must not be better than random within any achievable computational bounds) 

* As explained above, no hidden shortcuts. Everybody has equal knowledge. 

* Predictable and close to constant PoW computation performance, and not linear in performance relative to input size the way SHA256 is (lossy implementations will always make it not-quite-constant) 

* As explained above, no significant reusable state or other reusable work (killing ASICBOOST) 

* As explained above, no meaningful precomputation possible. No unfair headstarts. 

* Should only rely on just transistors for implementation, shouldn't rely on memory or other components due to unknowable future engineering results and changes in cost

* Reasonably compact implementation, measured in memory use, CPU load and similar metrics 

* Reasonably small inputs and outputs (in line with regular hashes) 

* All mining PoW should be "embarrassingly parallel" (highly parallellizable) with minimal or no gain from batch computation, performance scaling should be linear with increased chip size & cycle speed. 

What else is there? Did I miss anything important?