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Topic: Betrayal of the ASIC manufacturers (Read 4739 times)

full member
Activity: 182
Merit: 100
October 27, 2014, 01:40:03 AM
#42
They are going for profit, that's it, you would do the same thing in they place.
legendary
Activity: 3738
Merit: 3848
October 25, 2014, 06:46:10 PM
#41
I do lump all the asic manufacturers together because they have all done exactly what I said. Your heroes, Asicminer, are one of the worst offenders because they mine themselves and by proxy whilst telling their customers that they want everyone to have a chance to participate in mining. What they actually want is the chumps to keep financing their mining activities by believing that they will make some money from their purchase.

You do realize that Asicminer was publicly funded and built their farm using those funds right?

Quote
There's NEVER been one asic manufacturers who has said "thanks for your order, we will do everything we can to keep you as a customer and help you to make money. We'll make sure you get more hashing power when you need it, not when we decide we'll give you some more".

Completely wrong. Asicminer, Bitfury, Bitmain, Spondoolies-tech, Rockminer, and BTCGarden all operate without BS, have great customer service, and adequately compensate customers for any delays/underperformance.

Good practice by those mentioned, but irrelevant in the long run if tens of thousands of customers lose money on these transactions.
legendary
Activity: 3738
Merit: 3848
October 25, 2014, 06:44:33 PM
#40
@ gallery2000 we just touched 400usd .  I see us above 500 by Nov 1st

  The correction happened we dropped to 298 a week or so ago and now back up for a few months.

Unless  the moron asic builder decide to expand the data centers again.

 

Well, that's exactly what they are doing, KnC, amhash, etc.
I actually understand the OP (thread initiator) position. I think that current policies of mining expansion will lead to bitcoin Depression very soon.
legendary
Activity: 1512
Merit: 1000
October 25, 2014, 03:53:56 PM
#39
I do lump all the asic manufacturers together because they have all done exactly what I said. Your heroes, Asicminer, are one of the worst offenders because they mine themselves and by proxy whilst telling their customers that they want everyone to have a chance to participate in mining. What they actually want is the chumps to keep financing their mining activities by believing that they will make some money from their purchase. Also look at former all-round-good-guys KNC, the minute they said they would mine for themselves then purchasers should have walked away.
The difference as I see it is that I own part of AM via shares.  Please show me where I can buy shares of any other manufacturer.


Quote
There's NEVER been one asic manufacturers who has said "thanks for your order, we will do everything we can to keep you as a customer and help you to make money. We'll make sure you get more hashing power when you need it, not when we decide we'll give you some more".

Successfully or not, I believe Spondoolies Tech is trying to manage this approach.
hero member
Activity: 770
Merit: 509
October 25, 2014, 03:53:29 PM
#38
I do lump all the asic manufacturers together because they have all done exactly what I said. Your heroes, Asicminer, are one of the worst offenders because they mine themselves and by proxy whilst telling their customers that they want everyone to have a chance to participate in mining. What they actually want is the chumps to keep financing their mining activities by believing that they will make some money from their purchase.

You do realize that Asicminer was publicly funded and built their farm using those funds right?

Quote
There's NEVER been one asic manufacturers who has said "thanks for your order, we will do everything we can to keep you as a customer and help you to make money. We'll make sure you get more hashing power when you need it, not when we decide we'll give you some more".

Completely wrong. Asicminer, Bitfury, Bitmain, Spondoolies-tech, Rockminer, and BTCGarden all operate without BS, have great customer service, and adequately compensate customers for any delays/underperformance.
sr. member
Activity: 441
Merit: 250
October 25, 2014, 03:35:54 PM
#37
If the asic manufacturers has decided to keep their snouts out of the mining trough and actually support the customers that financed them, then the difficulty would be considerably lower and miners might still be making money.

All that happened was a serious of on-shot deals based on pre-orders, which would have been fine if the manufacturers had put plans in place to keep their original customers supplied with a steady stream of products as the difficulty rose. Instead they sold in bulk for their own or 'proxy' mining operations and the ones that paid the highest ( ie not discounted) pricing for their equipment got shafted.

Please don't lump all ASIC manufacturers together with the scam companies.

As it has already been said but you seem to have ignored, several companies did a good job of not ripping off their customers and even giving them a chance to turn a profit.

Bitmain was a shining example. No preorders, no overpriced hardware, no BS, and just about everyone who ordered from them was able to turn a profit. (although Bitmain has degraded a bit recently)

don't be too hard on the OP.  sounds like difficulty w/power cost is making him think about powering off his miners.  home mining is getting to the point of ridonkulousness

It should be clarified that home mining is only no longer viable for people with uncompetitive electricity rates. Mining may still be viable if you pay less than $0.08/kwh or have free electricity(which many do).

I think people are being hard on the OP because of his hilarious plan to destroy bitcoin because he specifically can no longer profit from mining.

It's the sort of response you'd expect to hear from an elementary schooler that didn't get his way so he has to ruin the fun for everyone.

I do lump all the asic manufacturers together because they have all done exactly what I said. Your heroes, Asicminer, are one of the worst offenders because they mine themselves and by proxy whilst telling their customers that they want everyone to have a chance to participate in mining. What they actually want is the chumps to keep financing their mining activities by believing that they will make some money from their purchase. Also look at former all-round-good-guys KNC, the minute they said they would mine for themselves then purchasers should have walked away.

There's NEVER been one asic manufacturers who has said "thanks for your order, we will do everything we can to keep you as a customer and help you to make money. We'll make sure you get more hashing power when you need it, not when we decide we'll give you some more".


legendary
Activity: 2492
Merit: 1473
LEALANA Bitcoin Grim Reaper
October 17, 2014, 11:18:36 PM
#36
Have you felt like being betrayed by the ASIC manufacturers lately?  You are not alone.  We all feel the same way.  We, as home miners, popularized bitcoins through our supports and utilization.  It was written in stones that ASIC manufacturers produce the machine and we as home miners use them to mine.  It used to be a sin for the manufacturer to mine and compete with us. 

Now the unwritten laws are broken.  ASIC manufacturers are plainly setting up data centers to mine.  They are directly competing with us, the backbone of ASIC supporters.  They are betraying us. I hope this will lead to the collapse of btc and the eventual death of the ASIC manufacturers. 

I hope we as home miners will just dump bitcoins and let it collapse.

You sound really butt hurt. Next time don't buy ASICs and just buy bitcoin. It is called counter-party risk.
hero member
Activity: 784
Merit: 1004
Glow Stick Dance!
October 17, 2014, 07:37:20 PM
#35
What did you think, they were going to sell you hundred dollar bills for 75 bucks?  

ASIC retailers should deliver fully functional products to their declared specifications within the time-frame allotted. No more, No less.

The fact that that's even mildly contested is insane.

It isn't contested at all.  Every time one of these comes up I read the terms and they invariably state quite clearly that they are not offering any guarantee of delivery by a particular date.  Obviously I haven't read every single one so it is possible there are exceptions, but in general, they always use forward looking statements backed up with no guarantee.  It would be like going out with a girl who tells you up front that you aren't exclusive, and then getting pissed when she bangs some other dude because you chose to ignore what was told to you.  Whats more, we are how many years into this now and these things STILL sell out every single time.  At a certain point people have to take a little personal responsibility in the situation.  To further my previous analogy, by like the 30th other dude she bangs, at some point we're just going to assume you like your girl banging other dudes. 
At this point in the game unless you are brand new to bitcoin you know flat out that you aren't going to get your merch until it is all used up so if you buy anyway, whos fault is that?

Bravo! I couldn't have said it better myself. It's the old "battered wife" syndrome. "Maybe if I go back again, this time he won't beat me."
sr. member
Activity: 350
Merit: 250
October 15, 2014, 11:02:11 PM
#34
What did you think, they were going to sell you hundred dollar bills for 75 bucks?  

ASIC retailers should deliver fully functional products to their declared specifications within the time-frame allotted. No more, No less.

The fact that that's even mildly contested is insane.

It isn't contested at all.  Every time one of these comes up I read the terms and they invariably state quite clearly that they are not offering any guarantee of delivery by a particular date.  Obviously I haven't read every single one so it is possible there are exceptions, but in general, they always use forward looking statements backed up with no guarantee.  It would be like going out with a girl who tells you up front that you aren't exclusive, and then getting pissed when she bangs some other dude because you chose to ignore what was told to you.  Whats more, we are how many years into this now and these things STILL sell out every single time.  At a certain point people have to take a little personal responsibility in the situation.  To further my previous analogy, by like the 30th other dude she bangs, at some point we're just going to assume you like your girl banging other dudes. 
At this point in the game unless you are brand new to bitcoin you know flat out that you aren't going to get your merch until it is all used up so if you buy anyway, whos fault is that?
sr. member
Activity: 280
Merit: 250
time
October 15, 2014, 10:52:54 PM
#33
What did you think, they were going to sell you hundred dollar bills for 75 bucks?  

ASIC retailers should deliver fully functional products to their declared specifications within the time-frame allotted. No more, No less.

The fact that that's even mildly contested is insane.
sr. member
Activity: 350
Merit: 250
October 15, 2014, 10:21:29 PM
#32
There's nothing wrong with ASIC manufacturer's pocketing a larger share of the money than those they sell miners to.

The problem arises when they defraud investors with intentional deceit.

Most companies make money off of the initial opportunity granted by having investment capital from home miner's orders. Then they pocket an additional portion of the investor's expected return, causing most to go into the red.

No other consumer industry would be able to do this.
It's a fact that will tarnish cryptocurrencies indefinitely, regardless of how widely accepted they become.

Pretty much agree with this.  In a way they are like the bankers from the old school banking and stock exchange  system of wealth.

Should be fun to see what happens when the two square off to slice up the pie so to speak.   lets see if old money men simply absorb them.
It is well known that ASIC manufacturers can produce ASICs for next to nothing. If they are not able to sell their machines at retail prices I don't see any reason why they would not use their existing inventory to mine instead of just letting it "sit" in their warehouse.

That seems mostly irrelevant. It's about delivering as advertised.

If ASIC manufacturers want to mine with every ASIC they create that's well and good. They shouldn't sell consumers faulty, out of date, intentionally worthless hardware.

What did you think, they were going to sell you hundred dollar bills for 75 bucks? 
sr. member
Activity: 280
Merit: 250
time
October 15, 2014, 07:44:30 PM
#31
There's nothing wrong with ASIC manufacturer's pocketing a larger share of the money than those they sell miners to.

The problem arises when they defraud investors with intentional deceit.

Most companies make money off of the initial opportunity granted by having investment capital from home miner's orders. Then they pocket an additional portion of the investor's expected return, causing most to go into the red.

No other consumer industry would be able to do this.
It's a fact that will tarnish cryptocurrencies indefinitely, regardless of how widely accepted they become.

Pretty much agree with this.  In a way they are like the bankers from the old school banking and stock exchange  system of wealth.

Should be fun to see what happens when the two square off to slice up the pie so to speak.   lets see if old money men simply absorb them.
It is well known that ASIC manufacturers can produce ASICs for next to nothing. If they are not able to sell their machines at retail prices I don't see any reason why they would not use their existing inventory to mine instead of just letting it "sit" in their warehouse.

That seems mostly irrelevant. It's about delivering as advertised.

If ASIC manufacturers want to mine with every ASIC they create that's well and good. They shouldn't sell consumers faulty, out of date, intentionally worthless hardware.
full member
Activity: 210
Merit: 100
October 15, 2014, 07:10:59 PM
#30
There's nothing wrong with ASIC manufacturer's pocketing a larger share of the money than those they sell miners to.

The problem arises when they defraud investors with intentional deceit.

Most companies make money off of the initial opportunity granted by having investment capital from home miner's orders. Then they pocket an additional portion of the investor's expected return, causing most to go into the red.

No other consumer industry would be able to do this.
It's a fact that will tarnish cryptocurrencies indefinitely, regardless of how widely accepted they become.

Pretty much agree with this.  In a way they are like the bankers from the old school banking and stock exchange  system of wealth.

Should be fun to see what happens when the two square off to slice up the pie so to speak.   lets see if old money men simply absorb them.
It is well known that ASIC manufacturers can produce ASICs for next to nothing. If they are not able to sell their machines at retail prices I don't see any reason why they would not use their existing inventory to mine instead of just letting it "sit" in their warehouse.
sr. member
Activity: 700
Merit: 294
October 15, 2014, 05:58:01 PM
#29
What happens when one company controls 100% of the Bitcoins mined?  Let's say it happens?  One of two things:  either they can wreck the entire system by messing with the blockchain (unlikely unless they are crazy), or, 'raise prices' by controlling the supply of bitcoins, the same way DeBeers controls (or tries to, and they've done a pretty good job the last few decades or more) the price of diamonds, to extract monopoly profits.  This is Econ101, not controversial.  Some would say monopoly profits will encourage other mining pools to enter, and that's the way it works in theory, but sometimes, due to technological constraints (let's say Discus Fish invents some super-duper ASIC that's 1M times better than everybody else's and threatens to flood the market if any other big miner enters the market and this is known to everybody, etc etc), other firms cannot enter quickly enough, so either the monopolist will get monopoly profits for a long time (DeBeers, maybe OPEC), or, the government steps in and busts them up.

In order to perpetuate the monopoly, Discus Fish would have to hard-code the 1M times better ASIC miner to only mine on Discus Fish's pool.  Software can be cracked.  Cheesy

hero member
Activity: 784
Merit: 1000
Live Stars - Adult Streaming Platform
October 15, 2014, 02:56:22 PM
#28
@ gallery2000 we just touched 400usd .  I see us above 500 by Nov 1st

  The correction happened we dropped to 298 a week or so ago and now back up for a few months.

 Unless  the moron asic builder decide to expand the data centers again.

 They just need to keep their 'dick in their pants'   [figure of speech]  for about 60 days and put out very little hashpower.

 then they can have a  lot of 'quality pussy' [figure of speech]
The problem is they aren't saving up and going for that quality pussy.  They don't want to wait for it, so they're running around like a bunch of drunken sailors tagging every two dollar whore they can find.

In my life I have only one pussy and I am worshipping it.  It is the goddess of love and goddess of life.
full member
Activity: 434
Merit: 105
October 15, 2014, 02:12:56 PM
#27
@ gallery2000 we just touched 400usd .  I see us above 500 by Nov 1st

  The correction happened we dropped to 298 a week or so ago and now back up for a few months.

 Unless  the moron asic builder decide to expand the data centers again.

 They just need to keep their 'dick in their pants'   [figure of speech]  for about 60 days and put out very little hashpower.

 then they can have a  lot of 'quality pussy' [figure of speech]
The problem is they aren't saving up and going for that quality pussy.  They don't want to wait for it, so they're running around like a bunch of drunken sailors tagging every two dollar whore they can find.

Sailor here, come on man.
legendary
Activity: 4116
Merit: 7849
'The right to privacy matters'
October 15, 2014, 01:28:54 PM
#26
Have you felt like being betrayed by the ASIC manufacturers lately?  You are not alone.  We all feel the same way.  We, as home miners, popularized bitcoins through our supports and utilization.  It was written in stones that ASIC manufacturers produce the machine and we as home miners use them to mine.  It used to be a sin for the manufacturer to mine and compete with us.  

Now the unwritten laws are broken.  ASIC manufacturers are plainly setting up data centers to mine.  They are directly competing with us, the backbone of ASIC supporters.  They are betraying us. I hope this will lead to the collapse of btc and the eventual death of the ASIC manufacturers.  

I hope we as home miners will just dump bitcoins and let it collapse.

This is a good question.  Strictly speaking, Discus Fish, with a nearly 30% market share of bitcoins mined (if I read the pie chart correctly) is a monopoly that could be in theory broken up by the government where the majority of its bitcoin mining hardware resides.  I know, I know, it's not going to happen nor should it happen (I am against antitrust in general) but this is exactly how Standard Oil, by J.D. Rockefeller, was broken up by the USA in the turn of the last century.

What happens when one company controls 100% of the Bitcoins mined?  Let's say it happens?  One of two things:  either they can wreck the entire system by messing with the blockchain (unlikely unless they are crazy), or, 'raise prices' by controlling the supply of bitcoins, the same way DeBeers controls (or tries to, and they've done a pretty good job the last few decades or more) the price of diamonds, to extract monopoly profits.  This is Econ101, not controversial.  Some would say monopoly profits will encourage other mining pools to enter, and that's the way it works in theory, but sometimes, due to technological constraints (let's say Discus Fish invents some super-duper ASIC that's 1M times better than everybody else's and threatens to flood the market if any other big miner enters the market and this is known to everybody, etc etc), other firms cannot enter quickly enough, so either the monopolist will get monopoly profits for a long time (DeBeers, maybe OPEC), or, the government steps in and busts them up.

TonyT
  here is a story on power supply

https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/100-mw-station-824712

if this gets into the correct hands for bitcoin mining power could be 1 cent  per k-watt which would  be the same as having a .1watt per gh asic chip
full member
Activity: 210
Merit: 100
October 15, 2014, 11:26:32 AM
#25
Have you felt like being betrayed by the ASIC manufacturers lately?  You are not alone.  We all feel the same way.  We, as home miners, popularized bitcoins through our supports and utilization.  It was written in stones that ASIC manufacturers produce the machine and we as home miners use them to mine.  It used to be a sin for the manufacturer to mine and compete with us.  

Now the unwritten laws are broken.  ASIC manufacturers are plainly setting up data centers to mine.  They are directly competing with us, the backbone of ASIC supporters.  They are betraying us. I hope this will lead to the collapse of btc and the eventual death of the ASIC manufacturers.  

I hope we as home miners will just dump bitcoins and let it collapse.

This is a good question.  Strictly speaking, Discus Fish, with a nearly 30% market share of bitcoins mined (if I read the pie chart correctly) is a monopoly that could be in theory broken up by the government where the majority of its bitcoin mining hardware resides.  I know, I know, it's not going to happen nor should it happen (I am against antitrust in general) but this is exactly how Standard Oil, by J.D. Rockefeller, was broken up by the USA in the turn of the last century.

What happens when one company controls 100% of the Bitcoins mined?  Let's say it happens?  One of two things:  either they can wreck the entire system by messing with the blockchain (unlikely unless they are crazy), or, 'raise prices' by controlling the supply of bitcoins, the same way DeBeers controls (or tries to, and they've done a pretty good job the last few decades or more) the price of diamonds, to extract monopoly profits.  This is Econ101, not controversial.  Some would say monopoly profits will encourage other mining pools to enter, and that's the way it works in theory, but sometimes, due to technological constraints (let's say Discus Fish invents some super-duper ASIC that's 1M times better than everybody else's and threatens to flood the market if any other big miner enters the market and this is known to everybody, etc etc), other firms cannot enter quickly enough, so either the monopolist will get monopoly profits for a long time (DeBeers, maybe OPEC), or, the government steps in and busts them up.

TonyT
legendary
Activity: 4116
Merit: 7849
'The right to privacy matters'
October 14, 2014, 10:27:14 PM
#24
There's nothing wrong with ASIC manufacturer's pocketing a larger share of the money than those they sell miners to.

The problem arises when they defraud investors with intentional deceit.

Most companies make money off of the initial opportunity granted by having investment capital from home miner's orders. Then they pocket an additional portion of the investor's expected return, causing most to go into the red.

No other consumer industry would be able to do this.
It's a fact that will tarnish cryptocurrencies indefinitely, regardless of how widely accepted they become.

Pretty much agree with this.  In a way they are like the bankers from the old school banking and stock exchange  system of wealth.

Should be fun to see what happens when the two square off to slice up the pie so to speak.   lets see if old money men simply absorb them.
sr. member
Activity: 280
Merit: 250
time
October 14, 2014, 10:07:48 PM
#23
There's nothing wrong with ASIC manufacturer's pocketing a larger share of the money than those they sell miners to.

The problem arises when they defraud investors with intentional deceit.

Most companies make money off of the initial opportunity granted by having investment capital from home miner's orders. Then they pocket an additional portion of the investor's expected return, causing most to go into the red.

No other consumer industry would be able to do this.
It's a fact that will tarnish cryptocurrencies indefinitely, regardless of how widely accepted they become.
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