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Author Topic: what is behind the increase in Mining power  (Read 1883 times)
schnuber (OP)
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May 16, 2013, 08:32:13 PM
 #1

In the last two month mining power has trippled.
Where is this power coming from? I can only think of ASIC's. But I thought they are not available yet, referring to the BFL issue.
Or is BFL mining for themselves until difficulty is so high that it is hardly profitable anymore and then they will eventually ship their ASIC's to "normal" customers?

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May 16, 2013, 08:40:01 PM
 #2

I'm not taking a stance on the BFL in this paragraphs that's going to come next, BUTTT!!!

If BFL "is" "mining" with the finite amount of machines that could built to date, and if that tripled the hashing difficulty, it still would be profitable to mine since these machines would be shipped and reallocated to "normal" miners which wouldn't affect the already affected hash rate.  The great thing about bitcoin's are there are only so many, and sooner or later, they will be mined.  Once that happens, it's going to be a very interesting time in BitCoin. 

Yeah, did they, under this hypothetical situation, would of profited, yeah.  But in the end...it all equals out. 

As far as the increase, it's a theory that with the increased exposure from media outlets, I believe we have more miners in general.  I'm not discrediting FPGA's and the limited, at least I believe, amount of ASIC's that are out there,  I don't believe they have a majority of the hash power YET.  And I stronger CAP that word...YET. 

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schnuber (OP)
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May 16, 2013, 08:54:23 PM
 #3

I assumes that as soon ASIC's are being shipped on a larger scale mining power will simply explode.

We should not forget, ASICS are the best thing for bitcoin if we want it to succeed. Because they are powerfull and consume far less power than other technologies. And that is what bitcoin needs in order to be competitive with other currencies. Of course miners only want to make profits and that is why they sometimes resent the upcoming of ASICs because it will make their existing hardware outdated. But again, ASICs is exactly what bitcoin needs in order to be succesfull.
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May 16, 2013, 09:16:42 PM
 #4

In the last two month mining power has trippled.
Where is this power coming from? I can only think of ASIC's. But I thought they are not available yet, referring to the BFL issue.

Fortunately there are more competent companies than BFL out there doing ASIC product development

Avalon shipping 300 units @ 70 GH/s in their batch #1 (http://launch.avalon-asics.com/) and ASICminer (see http://deepfriedcat.com/ for fancy graphs) has about 20 TH/s online by now. And ASICminer is auctioning off various quantities of their 10 GH/s blades (about 200 by now).

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Or is BFL mining for themselves until difficulty is so high that it is hardly profitable anymore and then they will eventually ship their ASIC's to "normal" customers?

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May 17, 2013, 03:17:19 AM
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There are 2 main reasons why the network hashrate is growing:

#1) ASICs. ASICMiner has brought many TH/s online, and has even started selling their blades to customers (at a ridiculous cost, tho. It's barely worth it). Avalon has shipped as well, but all of their units are in customer hands, they don't mine any. BFL has started shipping, but limited amounts.

#2) Price drives difficulty. This has been proven elsewhere. Even if there were no ASICs, we would still have a ginormous network hashrate. When the price hit slowly but surely increasing in price from $20-$250 like it did over the past several months, it attracts new miners. It also encourages existing miners to expand their operations, as every BTC mined is now worth more.

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May 17, 2013, 03:33:54 AM
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I can't help but notice from that graph that a single entity, AsicMiner, currently owns about 25% of the Bitcoin network hashrate. As their stock increases and they continue to add THs to their network, wouldn't they naturally approach a true 51% attack capability?

I doubt that is the plan, but it's already at 25% and growing extremely fast. It peaked at 30% and doubled it's speed in a matter of a week even... If it were to double it's speed again, it would already be at 51% attack capability.

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May 17, 2013, 03:41:23 AM
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I can't help but notice from that graph that a single entity, AsicMiner, currently owns about 25% of the Bitcoin network hashrate. As their stock increases and they continue to add THs to their network, wouldn't they naturally approach a true 51% attack capability?

I doubt that is the plan, but it's already at 25% and growing extremely fast. It peaked at 30% and doubled it's speed in a matter of a week even... If it were to double it's speed again, it would already be at 51% attack capability.

AsicMiner wants a stable and prosperous Bitcoin. Why would they risk $3000 for every solved block trying some 51% drama which would only tank the fx rate to dismal lows?

Just the same. It is good that Avalon are making many chips and finally it seems BFL are getting their act together. These will even out the hash-rate across more miners,

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May 17, 2013, 01:07:15 PM
 #8

Also its getting a lot of press more people coming online.  I've not been doing this long and will have 8 cards up soon.

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May 17, 2013, 03:52:18 PM
 #9

Only one response about price? C'mon.

Price. Price. Price.

Bitcoins are worth more now than they ever have been, with the exception of the crazy ass bubble high when they were worth 2x what they are now. Even after the "crash" they're still worth about 5x what they were in February, and 10x what they were in January.

The fact that with the addition of ASICs, the current difficulty is *only* 3x higher is actually a testament to the conservative nature of miners (if I lived just about ANYWHERE else I'd be sitting on a big fat mining farm as we speak).
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May 17, 2013, 07:20:12 PM
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There are companies that are creating ASICs to mine for themselves. BFL and Avalon probably do that as well to some extent.
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May 17, 2013, 08:21:23 PM
 #11

We startet in Mar before the asics appeared with 30 TH/s and now we have 90 TH/s

CompanyPcsHashrate GH/sTotal
Avalon30070 GH/s21,000 GH/s
ASICMINER Sold25010 GH/s2,500 GH/s
ASICMINER selfmining200010 GH/s20,000 GH/s

Makes a total of  43.50 TH/s

30 TH/s + 43 TH/s = 73 TH/s

Where did the others 20 TH/s did come from? from GPU and FPGA miners because the price pushed profitability?

Anyone have an idea?
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May 19, 2013, 03:33:46 AM
 #12

We startet in Mar before the asics appeared with 30 TH/s and now we have 90 TH/s

CompanyPcsHashrate GH/sTotal
Avalon30070 GH/s21,000 GH/s
ASICMINER Sold25010 GH/s2,500 GH/s
ASICMINER selfmining200010 GH/s20,000 GH/s

Makes a total of  43.50 TH/s

30 TH/s + 43 TH/s = 73 TH/s

Where did the others 20 TH/s did come from? from GPU and FPGA miners because the price pushed profitability?

Anyone have an idea?


Only one response about price? C'mon.

Price. Price. Price.

Bitcoins are worth more now than they ever have been, with the exception of the crazy ass bubble high when they were worth 2x what they are now. Even after the "crash" they're still worth about 5x what they were in February, and 10x what they were in January.

The fact that with the addition of ASICs, the current difficulty is *only* 3x higher is actually a testament to the conservative nature of miners (if I lived just about ANYWHERE else I'd be sitting on a big fat mining farm as we speak).

A shorter response might be, "yes, GPUs (and a few fpgas)."
CryptoJunky
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May 19, 2013, 09:33:49 PM
 #13

I think people underestimate the number of new GPU miners that started mining in the last few months. The press attention that Bitcoin received around the price spike likely drove a lot of people to use their otherwise idle machines for mining. While some mining power has shifted over to Litecoin, I think there are still a lot of GPUs on Bitcoin.

With the price increase GPU mining is still profitable, and new GPUs can be sold off in the event that that changes drastically.

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