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Topic: US researcher banned for mining bitcoin using university supercomputers #btc (Read 1262 times)

legendary
Activity: 1789
Merit: 1008
Keep it dense, yeah?
Wonder how long they were mining for. If it were any longer than a day (which I'm going to assume it was) then I'm surprised that nobody noticed sooner.

Nice haul though!
hero member
Activity: 644
Merit: 500
I thought it was a professor? And wasn't this posted months ago?
legendary
Activity: 4410
Merit: 4766
how many petaflops would the bitcoin network be capable of of it was converted to a supercomputers.

alot less then the current bitcoin network.

afterall the super computer in question is CPU managed, and the news is 2 years old. so i do not expect that super computer to have hashed much. afterall we are passed CPU, GPU, FPGA and now into ASICS. and there are many 10's of thousands of ASICS in the world.

secondly due to the article refering to a 2 year old story. the $10k of bitcoins where when bitcoins were about $2. meaning he got 5000 coins.

which today if he kept them and never spent them, would be worth $3.25million
full member
Activity: 147
Merit: 100
That's what happens when you use your employer's resources for your own personal gain without their knowledge. And it's especially bad considering that he spent $150k in resources to generate $10k in bitcoin.
sr. member
Activity: 434
Merit: 250
how many petaflops would the bitcoin network be capable of of it was converted to a supercomputers.
hero member
Activity: 896
Merit: 1000
hero member
Activity: 896
Merit: 1000
The U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) has banned a researcher for using supercomputer resources to generate bitcoin.

In the semiannual report to Congress by the NSF Office of Inspector General, the organization said it received reports of a researcher who was using NSF-funded supercomputers at two universities to mine bitcoin.

Mining is a process to generate the digital currency that involves complex calculations. Bitcoin can be converted to traditional currencies, and 1 bitcoin was worth roughly US$654 on Friday, according to indexes on CoinDesk.

The computationally intensive mining took up about $150,000 worth of NSF-supported computer use at the two universities to generate bitcoins worth about $8,000 to $10,000, according to the report. It did not name the researcher or the universities.

The universities told the NSF that the work was unauthorized, reporting that the researcher accessed the computers remotely, even using a mirror site in Europe, possibly to conceal his identity.

The researcher said he was simply conducting tests, Inspector General Allison Lerner’s office wrote in the report, which covers six months to March 31.

“The researcher’s access to all NSF-funded supercomputer resources was terminated,” the office wrote. “In response to our recommendation, NSF suspended the researcher government-wide.”

The office, which is tasked with promoting efficiency in NSF programs and detecting cases of fraud, did not release other details of the case.

It did not immediately respond to a request for more information.

The incident follows a similar case in February in which a researcher at Harvard University was caught using supercomputer resources to mine dogecoin, a recently launched virtual currency.

The researcher was barred from accessing the computer resources.



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