Author

Topic: The day mining become unprofitable! (Read 2273 times)

newbie
Activity: 56
Merit: 0
April 26, 2018, 03:30:37 AM
#40
The fact is:Bitcoin mining has grown from a handful of early enthusiasts into a cottage industry, into a specialized industrial-level venture. The easy money was scooped out a long time ago and what remains is buried under the cryptographic equivalent of tons of hard rock.
jr. member
Activity: 33
Merit: 1
legendary
Activity: 1512
Merit: 1218
Change is in your hands
March 24, 2018, 04:44:17 PM
#38
Mining can be very profitable, but its not that simple to execute. An example - I found a new coin at the very beginning (few days after the launch) - hired rigs (I had like 20% of the total hash rate in the network), mined the shit out of that for 2 days, sold all coins next day - quick 10x profit. But of course there is a risk - this coins come and go, you can mine and have useless coins that no one will ever buy. So to summarize - the big bucks are in new coins, and with proper selection you can make a shitload of money. The hardest part is to find the good ones..

Wow you are a special kind of shit poster aren't you? You responded to a two years old thread with a crappy answer that has nothing to do with the question I asked. Spam somewhere else kiddo.. BTW who is managing this campaign?.
member
Activity: 742
Merit: 21
Be the reason someone smiles today
March 24, 2018, 02:20:48 AM
#37
Mining can be very profitable, but its not that simple to execute. An example - I found a new coin at the very beginning (few days after the launch) - hired rigs (I had like 20% of the total hash rate in the network), mined the shit out of that for 2 days, sold all coins next day - quick 10x profit. But of course there is a risk - this coins come and go, you can mine and have useless coins that no one will ever buy. So to summarize - the big bucks are in new coins, and with proper selection you can make a shitload of money. The hardest part is to find the good ones..
hero member
Activity: 868
Merit: 1000
September 13, 2014, 06:06:09 AM
#36
Anyway mining will always be profitable for someone (as long as bitcoin doesn't go to zero). Because whoever is doing it unprofitably will turn off their miners, boosting profits for everyone else. Eventually mining with leading edge technology in a low electricity cost area will stabilize somewhere at a comparable rate of return to other investments... i.e. 6-10%ish per year.

It is somehow true but there are more noobs in this world then you can imagine. A lot of people is mining at losses thinking they are securing the network..
sr. member
Activity: 420
Merit: 250
September 12, 2014, 10:47:14 PM
#35
Anyway mining will always be profitable for someone (as long as bitcoin doesn't go to zero). Because whoever is doing it unprofitably will turn off their miners, boosting profits for everyone else. Eventually mining with leading edge technology in a low electricity cost area will stabilize somewhere at a comparable rate of return to other investments... i.e. 6-10%ish per year.
sr. member
Activity: 476
Merit: 501
September 12, 2014, 08:59:31 PM
#34
Look at what happened with Doge. It is one of the possible scenarios, but not the only one, ofc
sr. member
Activity: 294
Merit: 250
September 12, 2014, 06:22:39 PM
#33
Well, maybe small mining farms (1-100 Ths)  will be unprofitable but Always bigger investors will get paid...
sr. member
Activity: 378
Merit: 250
FURring bitcoin up since 1762
September 12, 2014, 05:52:04 PM
#32
asic will be everywhere smartphone, heater, watch, shoes, glasses, everybody mine to secure the network of the new world reserved currency

An ASIC is an "application specific integrated circuit". For a bitcoin mining ASIC to be in your smartphone or watch, the company who builds it has to purposefully put it there. These are small devices with thousands of different functions and constant competition for new technology to be included in them. And, they have access to very little power and one of the main constraints is battery life. They will never be meaningfully used for mining.

As for heaters... sure. A bitcoin miner makes a great heater.

Yeah, but that is what he is suggesting. He says that Bitcoin mining ASICs will be included in all electronics, in order to use them to mine Bitcoin. I don't really believe that, either, but hey It's at least an interesting idea!
sr. member
Activity: 420
Merit: 250
September 12, 2014, 03:41:36 PM
#31
asic will be everywhere smartphone, heater, watch, shoes, glasses, everybody mine to secure the network of the new world reserved currency

An ASIC is an "application specific integrated circuit". For a bitcoin mining ASIC to be in your smartphone or watch, the company who builds it has to purposefully put it there. These are small devices with thousands of different functions and constant competition for new technology to be included in them. And, they have access to very little power and one of the main constraints is battery life. They will never be meaningfully used for mining.

As for heaters... sure. A bitcoin miner makes a great heater.
legendary
Activity: 1806
Merit: 1003
September 12, 2014, 02:49:37 PM
#30
So many good news lately, wonder when whales will stop keeping the price low to buy as much cheap BTC as possible from morons before the price sky rockets again.

lol, no the whales are not keeping the price low, how would they do that if their purpose is to buy BTC? they would have to sell BTC to keep price low.

It's the insanely high mining cost, that is outpacing the inflow of capital. Each year around $300-500 million are transferred from the Bitcoin eco-system to the pockets of hardware vendor and electric company.

So if the annual inflow of capital is lower than this number, Bitcoin price WILL fall. It's pretty simple.

Currently I only see two catalyst that can possibly stop the trend of falling price, one is Bitcoin ETF, this is a game changer. The other is the next halving. These two will have huge positive effects on the price, and create big inflow of capital. I don't see any other catalyst that can help the price, all these "good news" and adoption won't do anything, they are already priced in.

If the twins pass the ETF - thats seriously going to change everything. Since most common investors rather invest through the stock market.

Thats a huge reach to all the non-savy old baby boomers as well.

Correct, ETF was a big game changer for gold and silver too, and these already had a rather mature market to begin with. Now imagine what it would do for Bitcoin, it's going to be huge.
sr. member
Activity: 252
Merit: 250
September 12, 2014, 02:17:38 PM
#29
So many good news lately, wonder when whales will stop keeping the price low to buy as much cheap BTC as possible from morons before the price sky rockets again.

lol, no the whales are not keeping the price low, how would they do that if their purpose is to buy BTC? they would have to sell BTC to keep price low.

It's the insanely high mining cost, that is outpacing the inflow of capital. Each year around $300-500 million are transferred from the Bitcoin eco-system to the pockets of hardware vendor and electric company.

So if the annual inflow of capital is lower than this number, Bitcoin price WILL fall. It's pretty simple.

Currently I only see two catalyst that can possibly stop the trend of falling price, one is Bitcoin ETF, this is a game changer. The other is the next halving. These two will have huge positive effects on the price, and create big inflow of capital. I don't see any other catalyst that can help the price, all these "good news" and adoption won't do anything, they are already priced in.

If the twins pass the ETF - thats seriously going to change everything. Since most common investors rather invest through the stock market.

Thats a huge reach to all the non-savy old baby boomers as well.
legendary
Activity: 1806
Merit: 1003
September 12, 2014, 12:36:25 PM
#28
So many good news lately, wonder when whales will stop keeping the price low to buy as much cheap BTC as possible from morons before the price sky rockets again.

lol, no the whales are not keeping the price low, how would they do that if their purpose is to buy BTC? they would have to sell BTC to keep price low.

It's the insanely high mining cost, that is outpacing the inflow of capital. Each year around $300-500 million are transferred from the Bitcoin eco-system to the pockets of hardware vendor and electric company.

So if the annual inflow of capital is lower than this number, Bitcoin price WILL fall. It's pretty simple.

Currently I only see two catalyst that can possibly stop the trend of falling price, one is Bitcoin ETF, this is a game changer. The other is the next halving. These two will have huge positive effects on the price, and create big inflow of capital. I don't see any other catalyst that can help the price, all these "good news" and adoption won't do anything, they are already priced in.
newbie
Activity: 28
Merit: 0
September 12, 2014, 12:16:11 PM
#27
So many good news lately, wonder when whales will stop keeping the price low to buy as much cheap BTC as possible from morons before the price sky rockets again.
hero member
Activity: 686
Merit: 500
A pumpkin mines 27 hours a night
September 12, 2014, 11:57:18 AM
#26
Okay, let's assume you're right... What do you propose we do? Do you really think PoS or something alike will solve the problem? Aren't there theoretical as well as practical problems with those methods, (too)? The problem of it all really is, that we don't see if it really drives us into a corner for at least many years, if not decades! Will we see a change of the block reward? Phew...


The competition is already driving PoW miners to use free and renewable energy to power the ASIC's. This momentum will continue, with or without ASIC appliances and thus Bitcoin will remain secure with a very high hashrate baseline.

There's no such thing as free electricity, someone is paying for it.

Renewable energy currently probably cost more than traditional in most places, and can not be used economically, that's why governments provide large subsidies for these. Otherwise the whole world would have switched over already.

Well, there are places though, where renewable energy is abundant. Those places are usually where large rivers are, in areas with a lot of mountains and so on. The Pacific Northwest, Sweden, etc. comes to mind. The thing is: It's difficult to get the energy away from there, therefore the supply is much bigger than the demand. A mining operation in such a location is the way to go!
legendary
Activity: 1078
Merit: 1002
Bitcoin is new, makes sense to hodl.
September 12, 2014, 11:01:46 AM
#25
I guess moore's law will take care of that

asic will be everywhere smartphone, heater, watch, shoes, glasses, everybody mine to secure the network of the new world reserved currency
hero member
Activity: 658
Merit: 501
September 12, 2014, 11:01:33 AM
#24
No, mining PoS and being an active node is not the same thing. Bitcoin does not have PoS mining, and yet there's 7000 nodes.

For those mining PoS, they don't have to be a active node, it's their choice. Most will probably choose to be an active node, by running the client on their computer and keep it always on (because a lot of people, like me, keep their computer turned on all the time anyway), but it's up to them, they don't have to.

I understand the distinction between and active distribution of decentralized nodes and a potential distribution of decentralized nodes.
Yes, having a potential distribution of decentralized nodes is better than not having one. I am suggesting that Bitcoins 7k+ active nodes and all the inactive ones that occasionally come online is not enough and is vulnerable to an attack. The pool of active minters/miners/forgers creates a probability curve that can be attacked by people wanted to attack a target or the network as a whole.
hero member
Activity: 658
Merit: 501
September 12, 2014, 10:56:46 AM
#23
There's no such thing as free electricity, someone is paying for it.

Renewable energy currently probably cost more than traditional in most places, and can not be used economically, that's why governments provide large subsidies for these. Otherwise the whole world would have switched over already.


Correct, that is why I have mentioned "sunked costs" several times in regards to renewable energy sources. In context we are talking about the PoW network security if Bitcoin crashes or BTC appreciating in value doesn't match the block reward drop offs. With sunk costs into green renewable energy solutions, these miners will keep going regardless of these threats as some money is better than none and not running the equipment when you have already pre-paid for the energy is stupid.

legendary
Activity: 1806
Merit: 1003
September 12, 2014, 10:54:23 AM
#22
These are technical limitation, which can be overcome, probably pretty soon too, don't be shortsighted. 10 years ago, you wouldn't imagine watching a 1080p movie on your cellphone, it was technically impossible. Yet nowadays every flagship cellphone can do this easily.

Also again, a PoS mining app does not needs to be run constantly, you can just run it every few days if you'd like.


Yes, we are talking about active nodes to support a global marketplace. So yes, the nodes need to be on and working for security and to process the transaction volume.

I am a a geek and am factoring in "science fiction" into my predictions. So assuming that all cellphones are wireless charged in the future(likely), and assuming that nanotube batteries are developed, than .....hmmm, well in that case I may be wrong.....

Granted this doesn't address the other problems with DPoS and PoS security.... but perhaps a hybrid approach could be feasible in 20-40 years..... but this is assuming  that technology for PoW wont change as well.... so we are really just speculating and the most we can know is that right now PoS doesn't seem like a good suggestion.

No, mining PoS and being an active node is not the same thing. Bitcoin does not have PoS mining, and yet there's 7000 nodes.

For those mining PoS, they don't have to be a active node, it's their choice. Most will probably choose to be an active node, by running the client on their computer and keep it always on (because a lot of people, like me, keep their computer turned on all the time anyway), but it's up to them, they don't have to.

But I disagree with your conclusion, I think PoS NEEDS to happen right now, because hundreds of million dollar are transferred from Bitcoin eco-system, into the pockets of hardware vendor/electric companies. The longer this continues, the weaker the Bitcoin eco-system will become if no inflow of capital happens. Of course this problem is not obvious right now, due to large amount of capital flowing into the system, but when the inflow is overwhelmed by the outflow, things can get very ugly.
hero member
Activity: 658
Merit: 501
September 12, 2014, 10:51:50 AM
#21
These are technical limitation, which can be overcome, probably pretty soon too, don't be shortsighted. 10 years ago, you wouldn't imagine watching a 1080p movie on your cellphone, it was technically impossible. Yet nowadays every flagship cellphone can do this easily.

Also again, a PoS mining app does not needs to be run constantly, you can just run it every few days if you'd like.


Yes, we are talking about active nodes to support a global marketplace. So yes, the nodes need to be on and working for security and to process the transaction volume.

I am a geek and am factoring in "science fiction" into my predictions. So assuming that all cellphones are wireless charged in the future(likely), and assuming that nanotube batteries are developed, than .....hmmm, well in that case I may be wrong.....

Granted this doesn't address the other problems with DPoS and PoS security.... but perhaps a hybrid approach could be feasible in 20-40 years..... but this is assuming  that technology for PoW wont change as well.... so we are really just speculating and the most we can know is that right now PoS doesn't appear to be a good suggestion.
legendary
Activity: 1806
Merit: 1003
September 12, 2014, 10:48:46 AM
#20
Okay, let's assume you're right... What do you propose we do? Do you really think PoS or something alike will solve the problem? Aren't there theoretical as well as practical problems with those methods, (too)? The problem of it all really is, that we don't see if it really drives us into a corner for at least many years, if not decades! Will we see a change of the block reward? Phew...


The competition is already driving PoW miners to use free and renewable energy to power the ASIC's. This momentum will continue, with or without ASIC appliances and thus Bitcoin will remain secure with a very high hashrate baseline.

There's no such thing as free electricity, someone is paying for it.

Renewable energy currently probably cost more than traditional in most places, and can not be used economically, that's why governments provide large subsidies for these. Otherwise the whole world would have switched over already.
hero member
Activity: 658
Merit: 501
September 12, 2014, 10:43:35 AM
#19
Okay, let's assume you're right... What do you propose we do? Do you really think PoS or something alike will solve the problem? Aren't there theoretical as well as practical problems with those methods, (too)? The problem of it all really is, that we don't see if it really drives us into a corner for at least many years, if not decades! Will we see a change of the block reward? Phew...


The competition is already driving PoW miners to use free and renewable energy to power the ASIC's. This momentum will continue, with or without ASIC appliances and thus Bitcoin will remain secure with a very high hashrate baseline.
legendary
Activity: 1806
Merit: 1003
September 12, 2014, 10:43:11 AM
#18
Why does it need to be 100% DPoS or PoS, the reason why I used peercoin as example, is because the Bitcoin situation shares the most similarity, because Bitcoin will never be 100% PoS since it already has a long history of PoW distribution, it will be similar to peercoin, as peercoin will fade out PoW and into PoS.

So what you are advocating is a hybrid PoS/PoW framework? May I suggest you mention that in the future instead of making claims like "PoW is dead".


I already told you, there is no electricity if you already use a cellphone or computer. You have to keep your cellphone on anyway, mining PoS is just like running another app on your cellphone, there's nearly no electricity cost, or if there is, it's negligible. If you need an example, you can just use any PoS system, and I'll show you how to mine PoS with no cost (assuming you already use a computer and turn it on daily).

You are wrong for 2 reasons:
1) You are talking about hypotheticals as no one has a cell phone node now.... but lets assume that an app is developed....
2) Yes, there will be significant battery draw on a cell phone setup as an active node, so much so that few will do this(perhaps this is one reason there isn't a rush to develop such app ) Always on Wifi/Bluetooth and data do draw considerable more power and this is why cell phones with power saving features disable these services when not in use

Lets assume that people are comfortable charging their cellphone every few hours(unlikely)... with the numbers I cited above the profits for the average user don't even cover the hypothetical cell phone apps electrical usage either. This goes the same for Nxt or Peercoins 1% minting process as well. (the real profits with peercoin are made with ASIC's and PoW)


Can you show me some math showing where I am wrong?

These are technical limitation, which can be overcome, probably pretty soon too, don't be shortsighted. 10 years ago, you wouldn't imagine watching a 1080p movie on your cellphone, it was technically impossible. Yet nowadays every flagship cellphone can do this easily.

Also again, a PoS mining app does not needs to be run constantly, you can just run it every few days if you'd like. Also, with DPoS, there's no need to run your own PoS mining app at all, you delegate your stake to the delegates you vote in. So there are many ways to implement a PoS system to address the shortcomings.
hero member
Activity: 686
Merit: 500
A pumpkin mines 27 hours a night
September 12, 2014, 10:40:18 AM
#17
My Question is simple as far as i know miners get reward for blocks and the blocks include the transactions what will happen when mining stops? How will then transactions made? Sorry if these questions are already answered

Mining is self regulating. If electricity ever exceeds the cost of the reward than miners can simply take some of there older asics temporarily offline.
The laws of supply and demand will incentivize miners when the block reward drops. The market will likely anticipate the lack of supply and the price of BTC will bubble up before the next halfing in 2015, so even though miners will only be rewarded 12.5 instead of 25 BTC the value of that BTC will be worth between 3-8 times what it is today so it should temporarily be a more profitable year for miners. These deflationary bubbles will continue until 2140 and than miners will profit off of millions of transactions fees alone.

Exactly, it is a self-regulating thing. If the Bitcoin price goes up, it will still be profitable to mine for only 1 BTC block reward, a couple years later even for 0.001 BTC... If it becomes unprofitable at some point, people will stop mining, the difficulty will go down, and it will become profitable again for some. And even if there are just a few Satoshi to be mined with every block, a couple of people will just run their spare ASICs for the fun of protecting the network. It will actually be safer than today, since there's no incentive of running a gigantic operation.

That's ridiculous, what about 51% attack? if there's not enough miners mining, then it become extremely easy and cheap to 51% attack Bitcoin. Therefore the PoW mining cost must remain extremely expensive relative to the value of Bitcoin eco-system. PoW is a doomed concept.

Okay, let's assume you're right... What do you propose we do? Do you really think PoS or something alike will solve the problem? Aren't there theoretical as well as practical problems with those methods, (too)? The problem of it all really is, that we don't see if it really drives us into a corner for at least many years, if not decades! Will we see a change of the block reward? Phew...
hero member
Activity: 658
Merit: 501
September 12, 2014, 10:31:25 AM
#16
Why does it need to be 100% DPoS or PoS, the reason why I used peercoin as example, is because the Bitcoin situation shares the most similarity, because Bitcoin will never be 100% PoS since it already has a long history of PoW distribution, it will be similar to peercoin, as peercoin will fade out PoW and into PoS.

So what you are advocating is a hybrid DPoS/PoW framework? May I suggest you mention that in the future instead of making claims like "PoW is dead".


I already told you, there is no electricity if you already use a cellphone or computer. You have to keep your cellphone on anyway, mining PoS is just like running another app on your cellphone, there's nearly no electricity cost, or if there is, it's negligible. If you need an example, you can just use any PoS system, and I'll show you how to mine PoS with no cost (assuming you already use a computer and turn it on daily).

You are wrong for 2 reasons:
1) You are talking about hypotheticals as no one has a cell phone node now.... but lets assume that an app is developed....
2) Yes, there will be significant battery draw on a cell phone setup as an active node, so much so that few will do this(perhaps this is one reason there isn't a rush to develop such app ) Always on Wifi/Bluetooth and data do draw considerable more power and this is why cell phones with power saving features disable these services when not in use

Lets assume that people are comfortable charging their cellphone every few hours(unlikely)... with the numbers I cited above the profits for the average user don't even cover the hypothetical cell phone apps electrical usage either. This goes the same for Nxt or Peercoins 1% minting process as well. (the real profits with peercoin are made with ASIC's and PoW)

Sure cell phones don't use much power .... but we are talking about gross profits of 2 tenths of a penny a month here!

Can you show me some math showing where I am wrong?
legendary
Activity: 1806
Merit: 1003
September 12, 2014, 10:18:59 AM
#15
Actually, get your facts right, peercoin has over 1000 nodes:
http://bitinfocharts.com/ppcoin/nodes/

Peercoin is 0.2% of Bitcoin marketcap, and has 15% of the number of nodes as Bitcoin. So if I assume nodes will grow linearly relative to marketcap, if when Peercoin reach Bitcoin marketcap, it should have 525000 nodes, 7500% more than Bitcoin. how is that unhealthy?

Yes, 1k nodes is unhealthy. I just finished suggesting 7k+ is unhealthy.
Your extrapolation is just that , an extrapolation without any expectation that Peercoin will grow with Bitcoin and an assumption that the amount of nodes will correspond as well:
http://coinmarketcap.com/currencies/peercoin/
Evidence suggests that Peercoin will continue its downward trend in value actually.

All of this is moot , because Peercoin depends upon ASIC's and specialized miners and is a PoS/PoW hybrid. This poisons your whole argument as we need examples that are 100% DPOS or POS.


But generally speaking, there is virtually no electric/hardware cost if you already use a computer. The PoS client will runs just like a Bitcoin client (actually peercoin client is much more efficient in terms of disk space, but that's another topic), does not require any GPU power, and tiny amount of CPU to keep running. So why wouldn't a small stake holder want to mine if he already owns a computer? The beauty of PoS is that you don't even have to keep your computer on all the time to mine, you can just turn it on every few days if you'd like, and you'd still be able to mine normally with PoS. (this depends on the specific PoS implementation of course).

Do you have any examples of a DPOS or POS coin that is more profitable to mine for the average user than the electricity used by a cell phone , let alone a computer or server?

Why does it need to be 100% DPoS or PoS, the reason why I used peercoin as example, is because the Bitcoin situation shares the most similarity, because Bitcoin will never be 100% PoS since it already has a long history of PoW distribution, it will be similar to peercoin, as peercoin will fade out PoW and into PoS.

I already told you, there is no electricity if you already use a cellphone or computer. You have to keep your cellphone on anyway, mining PoS is just like running another app on your cellphone, there's nearly no electricity cost, or if there is, it's negligible. If you need an example, you can just use any PoS system, and I'll show you how to mine PoS with no cost (assuming you already use a computer and turn it on daily).

I don't see any reason 1k nodes for a 16m marketcap eco-system is un-healthy. Nodes don't just fall out of the sky, it needs to be grown in relation to number of users and the value of the eco-system. 7k nodes may be unhealthy for Bitcoin, but for any other altcoin, it's more than good enough.
hero member
Activity: 658
Merit: 501
September 12, 2014, 10:12:27 AM
#14
Actually, get your facts right, peercoin has over 1000 nodes:
http://bitinfocharts.com/ppcoin/nodes/

Peercoin is 0.2% of Bitcoin marketcap, and has 15% of the number of nodes as Bitcoin. So if I assume nodes will grow linearly relative to marketcap, if when Peercoin reach Bitcoin marketcap, it should have 525000 nodes, 7500% more than Bitcoin. how is that unhealthy?

Strawman.... please specify what facts I have stated are false. Nxt is technically healthier than Peercoin measured by market cap and better resiliency. Peercoin has been crashing in value compared to Nxt.

Yes, 1k nodes is unhealthy. I just finished suggesting 7k+ is unhealthy.
Your extrapolation is just that , an extrapolation without any expectation that Peercoin will grow with Bitcoin and an assumption that the amount of nodes will correspond as well:
http://coinmarketcap.com/currencies/peercoin/
Evidence suggests that Peercoin will continue its downward trend in value actually.

All of this is moot , because Peercoin depends upon ASIC's and specialized miners and is a PoS/PoW hybrid. Separating the value of PoW from Peercoin is difficult to do. This poisons your whole argument as we need examples that are 100% DPOS or POS.


But generally speaking, there is virtually no electric/hardware cost if you already use a computer. The PoS client will runs just like a Bitcoin client (actually peercoin client is much more efficient in terms of disk space, but that's another topic), does not require any GPU power, and tiny amount of CPU to keep running. So why wouldn't a small stake holder want to mine if he already owns a computer? The beauty of PoS is that you don't even have to keep your computer on all the time to mine, you can just turn it on every few days if you'd like, and you'd still be able to mine normally with PoS. (this depends on the specific PoS implementation of course).

Do you have any examples of a DPOS or POS coin that is more profitable to mint or forge for the average user than the electricity used by a cell phone , let alone a computer or server?
legendary
Activity: 1806
Merit: 1003
September 12, 2014, 09:53:54 AM
#13
sr. member
Activity: 369
Merit: 250
September 12, 2014, 09:47:36 AM
#12
"These deflationary bubbles will continue until 2140 and than miners will profit off of millions of transactions fees alone."
I can't stop laughing!!! Cheesy
hero member
Activity: 658
Merit: 501
September 12, 2014, 09:09:13 AM
#11
That's ridiculous, what about 51% attack? if there's not enough miners mining, then it become extremely easy and cheap to 51% attack Bitcoin. Therefore the PoW mining cost must remain extremely expensive relative to the value of Bitcoin eco-system. PoW is a doomed concept.

Bitcoin will remain secure: Asics and renewable energy used to power them are sunk costs so there will always be a baseline of mining.

You keep pumping this PoS or DPoS framework. The question I have for you are any of these PoS solutions profitable for the majority of users to "forge"? If not than I see a huge problem with PoS centralization as evidenced by a little research:

http://www.peerexplorer.com/
only 245 average nodes online.

Lets take one of the largest and healthiest PoS coins out there as a case an point example and do some quick math:

http://charts.nxtcrypto.org/cDistribution.aspx
90% of users fall between 1-1000 nxt ownership

So If the average user wanted to Forge (500 Nxt Average) he would make -
http://www.mynxt.info/forging_calculator.php

Nothing in 24 hours and 0.05Nxt in 1 month. 0.05 Nxt = 0.002 USD or 2 tenths of one penny in gross profit a month.... So a huge net loss for electricity and/or hosting/leasing fees

Lets say I want to dive ahead and become a Nxt "Whale"(top 3% of NxT holders) and invest 1 BTC in Nxt or 11389 in Nxt.
http://www.mynxt.info/forging_calculator.php

I would thus be able to forge 0.04Nxt per day or 0.0017 USD per day . This fraction of a penny wont cover the electric costs either.

No wonder their are so few nodes! Hmmm... that 245 node count is nicely correlated to the amount of extremely wealthy whales in the distribution graphs. The only ones profiting of of Nxt are huge whales!

Personally, I think a 7k+ avg active node distribution for BTC is very vulnerable. A 245 active node distribution average is a joke.... and that is with taking the healthiest PoS example as a test!

I look forward to you addressing this fundamental problem within PoS...... and if your answer is DPOS than cite a working coin example, and if none are to be cited than fork a PoS to create a test case example.
legendary
Activity: 1512
Merit: 1218
Change is in your hands
September 12, 2014, 08:49:51 AM
#10
I always get answers which satisfy me  Cheesy, Bitcointalk is awesome!  Grin
legendary
Activity: 1050
Merit: 1000
September 12, 2014, 08:30:26 AM
#9
^^  bitcoin network already does more in daily transactions, aprox. 200-300M dollars daily.
legendary
Activity: 1806
Merit: 1003
September 12, 2014, 08:23:11 AM
#8
My Question is simple as far as i know miners get reward for blocks and the blocks include the transactions what will happen when mining stops? How will then transactions made?

Your question as phrased has a simple answer -- when mining stops, no transactions can be confirmed.

For miners to stop mining, they need a good reason to.  Unprofitable mining may be one of those reasons.  

The posters before me are correct Bitcoin is self-regulating in this regard.  If mining is unprofitable, miners will drop out and difficulty will drop as well until mining once again provides an incentive to process transactions.

After all coins are mined, miners will be rewarded with the transaction fees contained in each solved block.  It is assumed that if Bitcoin still exists at this time, it will have a very large user base and therefore the sum of all transaction fees in each block will be significant .

Transaction fee alone won't be enough to secure a PoW network, unless Bitcoin charge like $10 per transaction. You can't magically make transaction fee good enough for securing the network.

For example, if Bitcoin becomes HUGE and process 10M transactions per day, with a fee of $0.30 per transaction, it's only $3m in fees per day.

TODAY, the miners earn $3.6m PER DAY, with 0.06M transactions per day, see the problem?? the 10M transaction Bitcoin's marketcap should be nearly $1 trillion, but will be secured by LESS miner than TODAY.
legendary
Activity: 1778
Merit: 1043
#Free market
September 12, 2014, 08:14:16 AM
#7
My Question is simple as far as i know miners get reward for blocks and the blocks include the transactions what will happen when mining stops? How will then transactions made?

Your question as phrased has a simple answer -- when mining stops, no transactions can be confirmed.

For miners to stop mining, they need a good reason to.  Unprofitable mining may be one of those reasons. 

The posters before me are correct Bitcoin is self-regulating in this regard.  If mining is unprofitable, miners will drop out and difficulty will drop as well until mining once again provides an incentive to process transactions.

After all coins are mined, miners will be rewarded with the transaction fees contained in each solved block.  It is assumed that if Bitcoin still exists at this time, it will have a very large user base and therefore the sum of all transaction fees in each block will be significant .

I think is the unique reason to stop mining  Wink .
legendary
Activity: 1806
Merit: 1003
September 12, 2014, 08:12:41 AM
#6
My Question is simple as far as i know miners get reward for blocks and the blocks include the transactions what will happen when mining stops? How will then transactions made? Sorry if these questions are already answered

Mining is self regulating. If electricity ever exceeds the cost of the reward than miners can simply take some of there older asics temporarily offline.
The laws of supply and demand will incentivize miners when the block reward drops. The market will likely anticipate the lack of supply and the price of BTC will bubble up before the next halfing in 2015, so even though miners will only be rewarded 12.5 instead of 25 BTC the value of that BTC will be worth between 3-8 times what it is today so it should temporarily be a more profitable year for miners. These deflationary bubbles will continue until 2140 and than miners will profit off of millions of transactions fees alone.

Exactly, it is a self-regulating thing. If the Bitcoin price goes up, it will still be profitable to mine for only 1 BTC block reward, a couple years later even for 0.001 BTC... If it becomes unprofitable at some point, people will stop mining, the difficulty will go down, and it will become profitable again for some. And even if there are just a few Satoshi to be mined with every block, a couple of people will just run their spare ASICs for the fun of protecting the network. It will actually be safer than today, since there's no incentive of running a gigantic operation.

That's ridiculous, what about 51% attack? if there's not enough miners mining, then it become extremely easy and cheap to 51% attack Bitcoin. Therefore the PoW mining cost must remain extremely expensive relative to the value of Bitcoin eco-system. PoW is a doomed concept.
sr. member
Activity: 378
Merit: 250
September 12, 2014, 07:48:19 AM
#5
The less miners there are the more profitable it is to mine, therefore someone will always be there to fill the demand.
legendary
Activity: 1834
Merit: 1020
September 12, 2014, 07:44:42 AM
#4
My Question is simple as far as i know miners get reward for blocks and the blocks include the transactions what will happen when mining stops? How will then transactions made?

Your question as phrased has a simple answer -- when mining stops, no transactions can be confirmed.

For miners to stop mining, they need a good reason to.  Unprofitable mining may be one of those reasons. 

The posters before me are correct Bitcoin is self-regulating in this regard.  If mining is unprofitable, miners will drop out and difficulty will drop as well until mining once again provides an incentive to process transactions.

After all coins are mined, miners will be rewarded with the transaction fees contained in each solved block.  It is assumed that if Bitcoin still exists at this time, it will have a very large user base and therefore the sum of all transaction fees in each block will be significant .
hero member
Activity: 686
Merit: 500
A pumpkin mines 27 hours a night
September 12, 2014, 07:31:35 AM
#3
My Question is simple as far as i know miners get reward for blocks and the blocks include the transactions what will happen when mining stops? How will then transactions made? Sorry if these questions are already answered

Mining is self regulating. If electricity ever exceeds the cost of the reward than miners can simply take some of there older asics temporarily offline.
The laws of supply and demand will incentivize miners when the block reward drops. The market will likely anticipate the lack of supply and the price of BTC will bubble up before the next halfing in 2015, so even though miners will only be rewarded 12.5 instead of 25 BTC the value of that BTC will be worth between 3-8 times what it is today so it should temporarily be a more profitable year for miners. These deflationary bubbles will continue until 2140 and than miners will profit off of millions of transactions fees alone.

Exactly, it is a self-regulating thing. If the Bitcoin price goes up, it will still be profitable to mine for only 1 BTC block reward, a couple years later even for 0.001 BTC... If it becomes unprofitable at some point, people will stop mining, the difficulty will go down, and it will become profitable again for some. And even if there are just a few Satoshi to be mined with every block, a couple of people will just run their spare ASICs for the fun of protecting the network. It will actually be safer than today, since there's no incentive of running a gigantic operation.
hero member
Activity: 658
Merit: 501
September 12, 2014, 07:14:13 AM
#2
My Question is simple as far as i know miners get reward for blocks and the blocks include the transactions what will happen when mining stops? How will then transactions made? Sorry if these questions are already answered

Mining is self regulating. If electricity ever exceeds the cost of the reward than miners can simply take some of there older asics temporarily offline.
The laws of supply and demand will incentivize miners when the block reward drops. The market will likely anticipate the lack of supply and the price of BTC will bubble up before the next halfing in 2015, so even though miners will only be rewarded 12.5 instead of 25 BTC the value of that BTC will be worth between 3-8 times what it is today so it should temporarily be a more profitable year for miners. These deflationary bubbles will continue until 2140 and than miners will profit off of millions of transactions fees alone.
legendary
Activity: 1512
Merit: 1218
Change is in your hands
September 12, 2014, 06:59:51 AM
#1
My Question is simple as far as i know miners get reward for blocks and the blocks include the transactions what will happen when mining stops? How will then transactions made?
Jump to: