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Topic: Has China’s authority classified cryptocurrency mining? (Read 607 times)

legendary
Activity: 2030
Merit: 1569
CLEAN non GPL infringing code made in Rust lang
Hey, just because Mao called the intellectuals to come forward to criticize his government, and then later enraged by their comments imprisoned them, doesn't mean the actual government ruled by the same communist party would do the same, would they?  Wink

Venezuela was a little different. The gov did made people register, under the threat that those who didn't register could have their equipment seized later.

Actually the police was already seizing equipment before this, not because it was illegal (it wasn't) but because "they just could" (there is no rule of law operating). After this registry was completed, the (illegal) practice continued so you are never safe. Not just because the de-facto government lied, but because they are unable to stop corrupt police or military from extorting, and even kidnapping people they believe to be wealthy to pay ransom.

They sacked the guy who promoted the first registry and there is now a second in control of an institution that is supposed to regulate "crypto activities". Miners are supposed to get a license, which details were never disclosed. I don't even know if that is working anymore...

So you are in limbo, at risk, unless you are really close to someone in power (perhaps sharing profits) so when the police/military do come to extort you, a call to the right person would make them back off. Not sure if Russia is the same, but China is dangerous to even think of doing that, yet some do...
newbie
Activity: 20
Merit: 10
So the chinese government encourage until the 7th May for miners to come forward and contribute to the conversation...

So on both occasions of the Chinese Govt acting on domestic mining they want the miners to reveal themselves,
first miners are banned unless they are registered
second miners will be banned unless they come forward and propose good on their contributions

So, a paranoid reading would be that... the Chinese government want to just know who and where you are. Though I don't think its necessarily the case at all, at this price point, I don't see it as unreasonable but the Chinese Govt wouldn't then just seize the mines themselves and operate them themselves...
like I assume has happened with miners confiscated in Venezuela, and like China the miners have to register with the government,
Like I bet also has happened to miners confiscated entering South East Asia,
Like I bet will happen to the mines that have been trapped in Iran by being lured with cheap power

Anyone think any of this is likely at all?
legendary
Activity: 1245
Merit: 1004
I know that is great news for all miners around the globe, but sure as hell China will not ban mining.

What i heard from one of my Chinese guys is that simply they will have to pay extra "tax" / "bribe" and their mining operations will keep on going.

At least China is decentralized when it comes to local bribery. LOL
We all to often keep chanting "socialists" totally neglecting the reality of world wide trade. China is a kapitalist country with some exfoliating red paint still left in place out of nostalgia.

Where is the hash?

The hash will come, Canaan rolled out Avalonminer 10, 31TH/s at 1736W. MicroBT released ASIC M20S reaching 72TH/s. None of the equipment out there can compete against that.
And that's been the missing "Signal" regarding the ban. Nope, no ban will happen. Or these companies would not release that hardware!
Or at least it might be true BUT not affecting the mining in China, strange as it might be appearing. "Decentralized" cough cough.
newbie
Activity: 20
Merit: 10
You all might just say China is rehashing its approach to the ban  Grin

But, I have a friend who lives in Sichuan and they said the renewed approach to Bitcoin has very much been taken at face value and seriously, at least for the time being & current price levels, on the surface, people will not risk it...

[epistemic status: conjecture, moving from anecdote, lol] of course it doesn't mean established mines will not just have to up their bribes and keep business open as usual.
legendary
Activity: 2030
Merit: 1569
CLEAN non GPL infringing code made in Rust lang
Who knows? The Chinese government is completely unpredictable. Sometimes they wish to ban crypto completely and sometimes they just wish to regulate it. Its like they cannot make up their minds.

Honestly, I treat it as a welcome change since the mining pools will become less centralized and it would also help nature too.

Bureaucracy and corruption, socialist mentality at its best. I don't think this relates much to the pools, as the big ones have nodes all over the world anyway, and if Chinese miners move to Monogolia and Siberia, they'll make sure to host pool nodes over there as well.

Basically opposition to crypto means opposition to bring more wealth for your country. Politicians used to control the masses just can't get that and fear the freedom of people doing things that benefit themselves. By the time they figure out their mistake (probably when they see their neighbors prosper) it would be too late. But that is what happens when you let politicians take control of the economy instead of leaving it in the hands of the people. Ironic, socialism is.
legendary
Activity: 2394
Merit: 6581
be constructive or S.T.F.U
Where is the hash?

It seems to me an explosion of hash should be starting and it does not happen.

Mind you hash can stay at -1 to +1  jumps for another year  it works for me. Grin

Works for me too to be honest, i can't complain  Roll Eyes

I have no idea why isn't the hash showing on the network  Grin, maybe they are buying gears that were already up and running? but sure as hell you can't easily find those 100$ / 120$ offers for S9 anymore, they now go for an average of 130/150$ , thanks to the increase in price as well as the rainy season in china.
legendary
Activity: 4256
Merit: 8551
'The right to privacy matters'
I know that is great news for all miners around the globe, but sure as hell China will not ban mining.

What i heard from one of my Chinese guys is that simply they will have to pay extra "tax" / "bribe" and their mining operations will keep on going.

The chinese government is known to doing such things just to get the business owners to pay more, besides there is not a single good reason why mining is bad for china.

Also notice that second hand gears prices in china went up, there are more buyers than sellers now due to the rainy season and cheap power. Seems like chinese miners are not worried at all.

Where is the hash?

It seems to me an explosion of hash should be starting and it does not happen.

Mind you hash can stay at -1 to +1  jumps for another year  it works for me. Grin
legendary
Activity: 2394
Merit: 6581
be constructive or S.T.F.U
I know that is great news for all miners around the globe, but sure as hell China will not ban mining.

What i heard from one of my Chinese guys is that simply they will have to pay extra "tax" / "bribe" and their mining operations will keep on going.

The chinese government is known to doing such things just to get the business owners to pay more, besides there is not a single good reason why mining is bad for china.

Also notice that second hand gears prices in china went up, there are more buyers than sellers now due to the rainy season and cheap power. Seems like chinese miners are not worried at all.
legendary
Activity: 4256
Merit: 8551
'The right to privacy matters'
Maybe on the topic for Phil's post ...
https://www.forbes.com/sites/trevornace/2017/07/25/china-just-built-250-acre-solar-farm-shaped-giant-panda/#45f358124685

Note the comment:
"The effort is partially a PR campaign as China continues to lead the world in renewable energy investment."

yeah  if you make a lot on mining and plow some of the cash back into solar it is great advertisement for the good mining can do.

Basically do what buysolar and I do but do it 10000x as big.

they could take this mistake and build a really big one

a partial quote:

The Gobi Desert blankets nearly 500,000 miles of northern China and southern Mongolia in dry, arid land. Cutting between the two countries and traditionally providing cover for the northern “barbarians”—what imperial China called the fast-moving Mongolian nomads who periodically attacked the empire—the Gobi has always been a headache for Chinese rulers. And yet while the government no longer fears invaders cutting through the desert and attacking Beijing, the rapid desertification of China’s northern regions poses an acute risk to the country and its people.

Defending Against The Desert

The Gobi is the fastest growing desert on Earth, transforming nearly 2,250 miles of grassland per year into inhospitable wasteland. This expansion eats away at space that was once fit for agriculture and creates unbridled sandstorms that batter cities near the edge of the desert. In May, one such storm enveloped 1 million square miles of northern China in dust. Combining with Beijing’s industrial pollution, the city’s air quality index shot to a peak of 621, a rating classified as “beyond index.” For context, levels above 200 are ranked by the United States embassy as “very unhealthy,” while readings between 301 to 500 are labeled “hazardous.”...

They have lots of room to build solar here .  a 250 acre site with good panels  would use about

250 x 500 = 125000 panels at say 320 watts each = 40 mega watts which is about 6.7 mega watts 24/7/365

so adding a build a year  would be nice gesture it would also cost about 40 million a build well it is China so maybe 25 million a build  at 3 cent power value it makes 144,000 a month or 1,728,000 a year. since you are mining and earning 6 to 9 cents  the field earns 3.4 to 5.1 million a year.

which  pays it off in 5 to 8 years.   field should last 20-30 years.
legendary
Activity: 4592
Merit: 1851
Linux since 1997 RedHat 4
Maybe on the topic for Phil's post ...
https://www.forbes.com/sites/trevornace/2017/07/25/china-just-built-250-acre-solar-farm-shaped-giant-panda/#45f358124685

Note the comment:
"The effort is partially a PR campaign as China continues to lead the world in renewable energy investment."
legendary
Activity: 4256
Merit: 8551
'The right to privacy matters'
China should simply push some farms to build solar arrays.
They reduce the coal burning so  they look good.
They look progressive.
Lastly they still can maintain the illusion of socialism saying the solar array was created for the good of all the people ie socialism.

Ta da do I get a medal from China’s leaders for solving the problem so eloquently. Roll Eyes
legendary
Activity: 2030
Merit: 1569
CLEAN non GPL infringing code made in Rust lang
China is one of the largest countries to contribute to cryptocurrency mining but it's unfortunate that they are planning to ban it this time. The decision is not yet final but I could sense that they will ban crypto mining only if they're not gaining profit from it anymore. Crypto mining is one of the largest crypto activity in the said country.

Well, they are going to stop creating wealth their (northern) neighbors will happily take instead. Unfortunately Chinese politicians with their still socialist mindset can't still fully grasp the importance of the global economy, even after being more open with more traditional business. Like most socialists, they are scared of "losing control". For socialism, "control" is everything. Ironic given their socialist economy policies provoked so many deaths during Mao's by simple (and late) misallocation or resources)...

When a "miner" comes into your country, first you are selling him electricity. This is even better than selling it to a neighbor country, as it will incur in less transmission loses (especially if you provide incentives to build "mines" near power generation). This miner is going to make wealth, sure your country won't see much of it, BUT you WILL see some pour into your local economy. Why? This miner needs to purchase things, even hire locals and pay wages in the local fiat. So you get people buying your fiat, which is in your favor. So this is like an export, it brings foreign currency into your market.

Now you could argue they give "little", but sum all those "littles" and you (as a State) are still getting something that would just not be there if you outright ban the practice. From a country's perspective, mining should not be different to any other industrial activity with high electricity demand, such as steel or soldering works.

The world will adapt and later they (slow-crawled bureaucracy) will realize their mistake. They are simply kicking wealth away.
legendary
Activity: 2912
Merit: 6403
Blackjack.fun
The moment they come up with something else which'll create more jobs than their chip factories, they may abandon mining but I don't see that coming.

Well, the main supplier for bitmain has been TSMC, which is from the China China doesn't recognize Tongue (Taiwan).

And it's not possible to enter each and every livingspace searching for one or three mining devices heating a room.
Well, maybe in China it is.

But once the big mines are gone, you are going to hit the jackpot quite a few times doing this.
Assuming 3 million miners (taking s9 for this), 3 miners per home, you have 1 million places out of around 300 million.
Talking about decentralization, 1/300 homes would have to host mining gear Tongue
legendary
Activity: 4256
Merit: 8551
'The right to privacy matters'
@ yankees yes I did get a broken image link so I hosted it at imgur.

Most likely the issue is not the op but the website.

So can anyone translate the language for us?
sr. member
Activity: 464
Merit: 301
@ phil and numismatist

The link is hard to access  I went on it  on both mac and windows on six different browsers.
Mac : Chrome, Firefox, Safari
Windows : Chrome, Firefox, Explorer.
Some times it shows sometimes it is a blank page.
I think phil must have seen a broken image and screenshot the link placing it on imgur.
I then think Frodocooper saw the same broken image and pulled the img off it just showing the link.
legendary
Activity: 4256
Merit: 8551
'The right to privacy matters'
How? It's same picture. And somebody has edited my posting, I had image tags surrounding that url.

The img did not show on bitcointalk.
legendary
Activity: 1245
Merit: 1004

How? It's same picture. And somebody has edited my posting, I had image tags surrounding that url.

I well remember the seemingly endless 'China ban' shit in 2014. For month after month no one could come up with anything certain.

True, always been fake news. So where is the official statement from goverment, proofing this right or wrong?
legendary
Activity: 2590
Merit: 3015
Welt Am Draht
So is this even authentic or official? There could be a proveable statement originating from goverments somewhere. Seen none, and could not even read them anyways.
And it's not possible to enter each and every livingspace searching for one or three mining devices heating a room.

Well, maybe in China it is. But not everywhere all over the world. I would like to experience a decentralisation of mining. We've seen the opposite, a centralisation into huge mining fabrics.

I well remember the seemingly endless 'China ban' shit in 2014. For month after month no one could come up with anything certain. This very forum had thousands of Chinese members. Not one came into Englishland and came up with anything to point to.

I hope it's true. We probably won't know until long after it's actually happened.
legendary
Activity: 1245
Merit: 1004
So is this even authentic or official? There could be a proveable statement originating from goverments somewhere. Seen none, and could not even read them anyways.
And it's not possible to enter each and every livingspace searching for one or three mining devices heating a room.

Well, maybe in China it is. But not everywhere all over the world. I would like to experience a decentralisation of mining. We've seen the opposite, a centralisation into huge mining fabrics.
legendary
Activity: 2590
Merit: 3015
Welt Am Draht
If this is true then the Chinese tumour has been finally excised. Farewell. Do us all a favour and don't come back.

It looks like the moneyed miners were migrating long before this anyway. Then again it's impossible to believe anything that anyone says about crypto, let alone crypto in China.
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