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Author Topic: [XMR] Monero - A secure, private, untraceable cryptocurrency  (Read 4669578 times)
burnbabyburn71
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October 18, 2014, 06:19:10 PM
 #15761

So there are big XMR botnets causing the selling pressure? That can't be good.

As I already explained, there are miners causing selling pressure. The days of people mining most of a coin for fun and hanging on to it are long past. Most miners these days are in it for the money and sell at least a good chunk of what they mine. It doesn't really matter if they are botnets or not.

Really? I would've thought due to the generally extremely low immediate profitability of mining coins (especially when you factor in electricity costs) these days would have caused more people to hold, in the hopes that the price of a coin will increase in the future. Otherwise the profits won't be high enough to justify mining in the first place. That's basically what I've been doing, and it has worked really well for me.

Botnet operators on the other hand will be making very good profits either way, and don't have to worry about electricity costs. So they'd probably sell the XMR immediately after receiving it.

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burnbabyburn71
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October 18, 2014, 06:20:28 PM
 #15762

Mining Monero isn't even that profitable, I don't understand why so many are mining and dumping. Surely there is another significant cause for the selling pressure

It is the most profitable algorithm to mine on a CPU, therefore it makes little sense to mine anything else on a CPU, whether or not you want the coin. For example, you see on the BBR thread knowledgable people explaining that you should mine XMR on your CPU even if you are mining BBR on your GPUs.

There is no "selling pressure" beyond what has always been there, with 20K coins being mined every day that need to find a home. In fact botnets have likely always been there. What has changed is that demand has dropped from about 80 BTC/day to about 50 BTC/day. That's still quite a lot!

Right, that makes sense. I haven't been following Monero so I'm not really aware of these things. Thanks for explaining.

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smooth
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October 18, 2014, 06:29:45 PM
 #15763

Really? I would've thought due to the generally extremely low immediate profitability of mining coins (especially when you factor in electricity costs) these days would have caused more people to hold, in the hopes that the price of a coin will increase in the future. Otherwise the profits won't be high enough to justify mining in the first place. That's basically what I've been doing, and it has worked really well for me.

There is nothing wrong with holding, but it is my opinion that represents only a portion of mining (of all coins).

Mining Monero on a CPU right now is break even somewhere in the neighborhood of 0.10 USD/kWh. So for people with low electricity costs (and that includes people with electric space heaters who have an effective cost of 0 -- it was noted earlier in this thread that with declining temperatures in the Northern Hemisphere we would expect to see more mining), CPU mining can be quite profitable.

Nobody really knows the cost structure for botnets, but it isn't zero (it takes time and/or money to create and maintain a botnet -- they don't just appear out of thin air).


burnbabyburn71
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October 18, 2014, 06:42:55 PM
 #15764

Really? I would've thought due to the generally extremely low immediate profitability of mining coins (especially when you factor in electricity costs) these days would have caused more people to hold, in the hopes that the price of a coin will increase in the future. Otherwise the profits won't be high enough to justify mining in the first place. That's basically what I've been doing, and it has worked really well for me.

There is nothing wrong with holding, but it is my opinion that represents only a portion of mining (of all coins).

Mining Monero on a CPU right now is break even somewhere in the neighborhood of 0.10 USD/kWh. So for people with low electricity costs (and that includes people with electric space heaters who have an effective cost of 0 -- it was noted earlier in this thread that with declining temperatures in the Northern Hemisphere we would expect to see more mining), CPU mining can be quite profitable.

Nobody really knows the cost structure for botnets, but it isn't zero (it takes time and/or money to create and maintain a botnet -- they don't just appear out of thin air).

Right you are, thanks.

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25hashcoin
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October 18, 2014, 07:11:45 PM
 #15765

Noob here. Am I solo mining properly? It says getting hash rate of probably average 180. How long should it take for me to see a reward? Also how does one gpu mine monero?

It depends on your hardware, but 180 might be right. At 180 you are essentially playing a raffle. There is nothing wrong with that (and indeed it is very good to help the network that way), just know what you are doing. Most likely you get nothing.

One issue with efficiency of CPU (including solo) mining is making sure you have huge pages set up correctly.



What are "huge pages"?

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smooth
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October 18, 2014, 07:14:56 PM
 #15766

Noob here. Am I solo mining properly? It says getting hash rate of probably average 180. How long should it take for me to see a reward? Also how does one gpu mine monero?

It depends on your hardware, but 180 might be right. At 180 you are essentially playing a raffle. There is nothing wrong with that (and indeed it is very good to help the network that way), just know what you are doing. Most likely you get nothing.

One issue with efficiency of CPU (including solo) mining is making sure you have huge pages set up correctly.



What are "huge pages"?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Page_(computer_memory)#Huge_pages
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October 18, 2014, 07:50:51 PM
 #15767

Noob here. Am I solo mining properly? It says getting hash rate of probably average 180. How long should it take for me to see a reward? Also how does one gpu mine monero?

It depends on your hardware, but 180 might be right. At 180 you are essentially playing a raffle. There is nothing wrong with that (and indeed it is very good to help the network that way), just know what you are doing. Most likely you get nothing.

One issue with efficiency of CPU (including solo) mining is making sure you have huge pages set up correctly.



What are "huge pages"?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Page_(computer_memory)#Huge_pages


Thanks.

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October 18, 2014, 07:55:33 PM
 #15768

I wonder how much of an impact claymore makes on the downward pressure of the price of monero.

He includes a fee with his AMD miner and I guess he dumps most of, if not all of the coins he gets.
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October 18, 2014, 08:10:45 PM
 #15769

There is no "selling pressure" beyond what has always been there, with 20K coins being mined every day that need to find a home. In fact botnets have likely always been there. What has changed is that demand has dropped from about 80 BTC/day to about 50 BTC/day. That's still quite a lot!

3600 BTC get mined each day, on ASICS only since totally unrentable on CPU based Botnets. (GPU Botnets as argument is invalid, since they have to keep especiall care for NOT getting dedected & cleaned of infected hosts. A 194 degrees Fahrenheit GPU or a fan on 4300 RPM is not exactly that)
20K XMR are like 20*1000*0.0024=48 BTC at current market value which could seek to cash out, at max. Indeed "selling pressure" looks different. That would be holder's panic to dump due to a network attack (been there, seen that)

If demand is like ~50BTC there are several figures NOT fitting. Demand is not higher then supply. Botnet mining for CN coins does not flood the Bitcoin market. Nor have ASIC mining farms found Monero as a long term storage for the parts of BTC mining revenue that does not need to get sold for covering power costs.

But both coins get beaten up. I blame lack of believe in a useability of cryptocurrencies manifestating. The opposite market oppining from the former crypto goldrush.
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October 18, 2014, 09:13:15 PM
 #15770

Mining Monero isn't even that profitable, I don't understand why so many are mining and dumping. Surely there is another significant cause for the selling pressure

It is the most profitable algorithm to mine on a CPU...


I do not agree. After having been mining XMR for a few months, right now I find CPU mining BSTY much more profitable than mining XMR.

Nice plug for your coin.  I just checked and c-cex has .43 in buy orders and 0 volume.  Allcoin has 0.0008 BTC volume last 24 hrs.

Who do you sell these coins to?
aminorex
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October 18, 2014, 09:13:54 PM
Last edit: October 18, 2014, 09:43:00 PM by aminorex
 #15771

这是买入的时机


对啊。

To those who have been asking: I am well, merely very busy at work.

To those whose hand are trembling, I advise patience.  It will be years before XMR achieves its potential.  I would personally liquidate all other assets before I would become a net seller of XMR.  Extreme volatility and drawdowns are to be expected in this embryonic phase.  But I do not recommend further buying if you already feel shaky.

The fundamental investment thesis of XMR is not appreciably damaged by any drawdown similar in order of magnitude to those typical of BTC in its early history, certainly.  We who can accumulate at these levels are well and truly blessed.
    



Give a man a fish and he eats for a day.  Give a man a Poisson distribution and he eats at random times independent of one another, at a constant known rate.
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October 18, 2014, 09:34:06 PM
 #15772

I wonder how much of an impact claymore makes on the downward pressure of the price of monero.

He includes a fee with his AMD miner and I guess he dumps most of, if not all of the coins he gets.

God bless claymore and the botnets for their efforts to keep Monero secured with high network hashrates, and ensure wide distribution via downward price pressure created by dumping.

Absent claymore and the botnets mining and dumping, the network would be less secure and other miners would be empowered to hoard more Monero than at present.

If XMR is to be as successful as BTC, it must also first undergo a long ecosystem seeding period of low valuation so that the masses may acquire cheap coins to their hearts' content.   Cool


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Monero
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shojayxt
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October 18, 2014, 09:39:52 PM
 #15773

Mining Monero isn't even that profitable, I don't understand why so many are mining and dumping. Surely there is another significant cause for the selling pressure

It is the most profitable algorithm to mine on a CPU...


I do not agree. After having been mining XMR for a few months, right now I find CPU mining BSTY much more profitable than mining XMR.

Nice plug for your coin.  I just checked and c-cex has .43 in buy orders and 0 volume.  Allcoin has 0.0008 BTC volume last 24 hrs.

Who do you sell these coins to?

Do you really think this one being my coin? Just check my activity in this thread and compare with the same on the BSTY one. I have a BTC value more than 10 times greater in XMR than in BSTY.

I am a small CPU miner (currently mining with only two computers) and I am just sharing my results after having mined both coins. Definitely BSTY is not for big whales, but it is much more profitable for small miners like me.

I should have left out the "nice plug for your coin in my post".  I'll apologize for that. 

How can BSTY be more profitable than XMR when there are no buyers?  The price listed on an exchange is meaningless without buyers.
cisahasa
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October 18, 2014, 09:40:31 PM
 #15774

is this coin still controlled by claymore?

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October 18, 2014, 09:42:29 PM
Last edit: October 18, 2014, 10:05:54 PM by bybitcoin
 #15775

I have a wallet (backup) in the .NET client version .36 from the past summer. For an unknown reason (to me), the client stopped working (including its new released versions up to .39). Does anybody know why?
aminorex
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October 18, 2014, 09:44:37 PM
 #15776

is this coin still controlled by claymore?

xmr has never been controlled by claymore in any meaningful sense. you must be thinking of that other coin.

Give a man a fish and he eats for a day.  Give a man a Poisson distribution and he eats at random times independent of one another, at a constant known rate.
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October 18, 2014, 09:52:59 PM
 #15777

is this coin still controlled by claymore?

Why do you say that?

Are there any numbers about the percentage of coins being generated by the claymore miner?

so the game is still the same? percentages from miner go to one man?
no other gpu miners out there?

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October 18, 2014, 10:06:52 PM
 #15778

is this coin still controlled by claymore?

Why do you say that?

Are there any numbers about the percentage of coins being generated by the claymore miner?

so the game is still the same? percentages from miner go to one man?
no other gpu miners out there?

There's been open source nvidia miner for several months, and there is also a russian miner (kminer) which has a much lower fee (0.7%) and supposed to have faster speeds as well, for last month or two.
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October 18, 2014, 10:23:42 PM
 #15779

is this coin still controlled by claymore?

Why do you say that?

Are there any numbers about the percentage of coins being generated by the claymore miner?

so the game is still the same? percentages from miner go to one man?
no other gpu miners out there?

There's been open source nvidia miner for several months, and there is also a russian miner (kminer) which has a much lower fee (0.7%) and supposed to have faster speeds as well, for last month or two.

There are plenty of available options, but IMHO, there's not much of a difference between a GPU and a CPU really. My i7 generates as much as my 5970.

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October 18, 2014, 10:29:50 PM
 #15780

And Claymore cut the fee in half.  Claymore is for AMD and there is an open source one for nvidia.
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