Name one.
Bluescope steel
Name one.
Bitcoin crackdown sends graphics cards prices plummeting in China after Sichuan terminated mining operations
Graphics cards from companies including Nvidia and Asus saw prices fall by as much as two-thirds on e-commerce platforms amid China’s sweeping bitcoin crackdown
https://www.scmp.com/tech/policy/article/3138130/bitcoin-crackdown-sends-graphics-cards-prices-plummeting-china-after
Gamers, rise up! Take what is rightfully yours, free the GPUs!
If mining is profitable surely bitcoin price drops.Yeah, in China the prices will drop. But the ban just means mining outside China got way more profitable. So ..
.. so more people will get into mining thus upping the costs of mining again. Maybe not as high as when China was involved but enough to make mining not super profitable again.Yeah, in China the prices will drop. But the ban just means mining outside China got way more profitable. So ..
No correlation. Bitcoin's price comes from speculation and not mining.If mining is profitable surely bitcoin price drops.
The big mining operations in Russia aren't being shut down. I believe that's the other place that is hosting those operations. Shut them down and I think we'll see a considerable amount of "rebalancing". But I doubt that will happen... so more people will get into mining thus upping the costs of mining again. Maybe not as high as when China was involved but enough to make mining not super profitable again.
Even if all the big nations shut down mining in their countries, there would still be enough clandestine mining as well as mining in other parts of the world to keep bitcoin going.The big mining operations in Russia aren't being shut down. I believe that's the other place that is hosting those operations. Shut them down and I think we'll see a considerable amount of "rebalancing". But I doubt that will happen.
Oh yes. This cat is not going back into the bag.Even if all the big nations shut down mining in their countries, there would still be enough clandestine mining as well as mining in other parts of the world to keep bitcoin going.
Taleb thinks it is.Oh yes. This cat is not going back into the bag.
No correlation. Bitcoin's price comes from speculation and not mining.
Yes.I'd think the latter has something to do with it as well. If it costs a lot to mine, that could affect how much people are willing to spend on one.
It doesn't work that way. Speculators are not interested in how much miners spend on their mining activities.I'd think the latter has something to do with it as well. If it costs a lot to mine, that could affect how much people are willing to spend on one.
It doesn't work that way. Speculators are not interested in how much miners spend on their mining activities.
Just a suggestion.
Why not stop Bitcoin where it now is? No more mining. Just divide and divide and the finite amount there currently is?
How? Bitcoin is decentralized. Nobody can stop anyone else from making more of it.
There's no "President of Bitcoin" to pull a switch or adjust a dial on it.
IIRC correctly there's a built in limit to how many Bitcoins there can be, but it's built in to like... the math. It's nothing that can be implemented at a specific time.
The sentence you deleted from the post you quoted negated this statement.No but if miners stop doing so because of costs, it might affect the market.
The sentence you deleted from the post you quoted negated this statement.
Just a suggestion.
Why not stop Bitcoin where it now is? No more mining. Just divide and divide and the finite amount there currently is?
I thought crypto would crash. But then I also thought fiat would crash. I did not take into account that some things can be talked up and supported for very long periods. In 2004 one website gave up predicting a crash because it just kept going. In 2008 it crashed but society stopped it from fully playing out. The world has a new set of problems. Printing money.