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Germany: Six Arrested in Illegal Crypto Mining Operation

Germany: Six Arrested in Illegal Crypto Mining Operation

German police have arrested six members of a mining ring who were making use of stolen electricity to mine currency since 2017, as reported by Freie Presse, February 6, 2019.

Hijacked Power

While people around the world enjoy using cryptocurrency, the actual process of mining crypto is quite tedious and more importantly, expensive, particularly in terms of energy cost. This has seemingly resulted in many stealing electricity in order to engage in mining operations.

This was the case of five men and a woman in Klingenthal, Germany, who were arrested after running a mining farm using stolen electricity.

The farm was located at PGH Elektro, a former electrical services company and housed about 49 individual computers. 30 of the computers had mining hardware such as GPUs (graphics processing units.)

According to the police force that discovered the illegal operation, the farm had been in operation since around 2017 and has made use of up to $250,053 worth of stolen electricity, enough to power 30 households. The exact cryptocurrencies that were being mined weren’t stated in the report.

This is only one of the many instances where people have been stealing electricity in order to mine cryptocurrency, though they are often caught.

The Cost of Mining

For individuals and companies that engage in cryptocurrency mining, energy costs are one of the biggest overheads to consider. In order to mine cryptocurrency in a more cost-effective manner, many firms move their operations to places with cheaper electricity costs.

However, this has not been without some controversy. Several residents of these areas that have seen an influx of crypto mining firms have requested that crypto mining firms be banned from their towns, with some having their wishes granted.

In 2018, Norway announced that it would no longer be subsidizing the costs of electricity for mining firms, causing the cost of mining in the country to soar.

Perhaps the biggest problem of the high cost of crypto mining in recent times is that while it is fairly constant, the market has all the while been notoriously volatile. As a result, it has become unprofitable for people and firms to mine certain coins as they are worth far less than they used to be. In the months following the price crash of late 2018, several mining firms had to shut down altogether.

Germany: six arrested in illegal crypto mining operation

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Published at Sat, 09 Feb 2019 03:00:02 +0000

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Antonopoulos On Trust: Fake News ‘Is About To Happen To Money’

Andreas Antonopoulos has predicted that the world’s money supply will suffer the fate of information in the fake news era.


Money To Get Its Fake News Moment

In a talk originally held April 11 but republished Saturday, Antonopoulos said that in light of the multiple currency failures seen in recent times, consumers no longer know what gives cash in their pockets value. During the discussion Antonopoulos commented:

blockchain training conference Antonopoulos

What’s really interesting is what just happened in [the] news that has left an entire generation of people now unable to discern truth from fiction, easily manipulated through propaganda […] What I’m going to suggest today is this is about to happen to money.

Just like the information consumer watching television or reading news sources online, the debate about whom to trust and whether the reputation of a source means that source can be considered reliable is now transferring to the financial sector.

…And bitcoin Is Already On Consumers’ Radar

Antonopoulos highlights the currency failures in countries including Zimbabwe, Venezuela, and Ukraine as prime examples of central banks failing to uphold the promise that cash will be worth approximately the same tomorrow as today.

One day, that phrase which seemed so meaningful and strong and satisfying – ‘the full faith and credit of the United States of America’ […] – compare it to this one: ‘the full faith and credit of the National Bank of Zimbabwe.’ […] That sentence no longer has much weight to it.

In terms of bitcoin’s role in providing a haven away from trusting third party authority, Antonopoulos used India’s increased interest in the virtual currency following demonetization of 86% of its cash supply last November.

bitcoin is not going after replacing national currency; […] it’s doing something far more dangerous: it’s encouraging people to put their savings outside the system.

Germany: ‘If You Think bitcoin Is Safe As Fiat, Take Responsibility’

For those reading the news a month after Antonopoulos’ words, a warning against using bitcoin, this time from Germany’s central bank, now strikes an altogether less sincere tone.

“From our perspective bitcoin does not constitute a suitable medium for storage of wealth,” Bundesbank board member Carl-Ludwig Thiele told German newspaper, Die Welt, last weekend. “Just one look at the highly volatile exchange rate demonstrates that.”

In further comments even more ironic in light of Antonopoulos’ words about trust, Thiele continued:

Carl-Ludwig Thiele

Whoever nonetheless thinks bitcoin is as safe as the euro or dollar must take responsibility for that. All we can do is warn people about using bitcoin as a means of wealth storage.

What do you think about Andreas Antonopoulos and Carl-Ludwig Thiele’s opinions? Let us know in the comments below!


Images courtesy of Andreas Antonopoulos, Reuters, AdobeStock

The post Antonopoulos On Trust: Fake News ‘Is About To Happen To Money’ appeared first on Bitcoinist.com.

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