New York Power Companies Can Now Charge Bitcoin Miners More (arstechnica.com) 128
Last Wednesday, the New York State Public Service Commission (PSC) ruled that municipal power companies could charge higher electricity rates to cryptocurrency miners who try to benefit from the state's abundance of cheap hydroelectric power. Ars Technica reports: Over the years, Bitcoin's soaring price has drawn entrepreneurs to mining. Bitcoin mining enterprises have become massive endeavors, consuming megawatts of power on some grids. To minimize the cost of that considerable power draw, mining companies have tried to site their operations in towns with cheap electricity, both in the U.S. and around the world. In the U.S., regions with the cheapest energy tend to be small towns with hydroelectric power. But mining booms in small U.S. towns are not always met with approval. A group of 36 municipal power authorities in northern and western New York petitioned the PSC for permission to raise electricity rates for cryptocurrency miners because their excessive power use has been taxing very small local grids and causing rates to rise for other customers. The PSC responded on Wednesday that it would allow those local power companies to raise rates for cryptocurrency miners. The response noted that New York's local power companies, which are customer-owned and range in size from 1.5 MW to 122 MW, "acquire low-cost power, typically hydro, and distribute the power to customers at no profit." If a community consumes more than what has been acquired, cost increases are passed on to all customers. "In Plattsburgh, for example, monthly bills for average residential customers increased nearly $10 in January because of the two cryptocurrency companies operating there," the PSC document says. The city of Plattsburgh, New York has since imposed an 18-month moratorium on commercial cryptocurrency mining to "protect and enhance the city's natural, historic, cultural and electrical resources."
Re: How about denying service? (Score:1)
They should have to install and maintain enough solar panels to cover their mining in order to get out of this charge.
Re: How about denying service? (Score:5, Informative)
That's not going to happen. It's not even remotely cost effective. These people go for places with hydro because hydro is ridiculously cheap once installed.
Solar is expensive. In comparison to hydro right near the dam, extremely expensive.
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And in this case, they make no sense whatsoever, duh.
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Negative. Expensive even after installed. You still need to maintain, and you still need to deal with intermittent supply as it's unfit for base load.
Hydro once installed is incredibly cheap. Very low maintenance, and so stable that it can even be used as spinning reserve in addition to base load.
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Then you build the fish bypass corridor, which is frankly a good idea to do regardless as it enables fishing-related economic activity upstream, and you remain as profitable as before after the costs are sunk as fish corridor requires almost no maintenance once in place.
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Building your own dam is prohibitously expensive also, if you're a single user. So moving in after it's already built to take advantage of cheaper rates is just mooching off of the taxpayers.
Re:How about denying service? (Score:5, Insightful)
Wasting energy to participate in a pyramid scheme is not a basic need.
Neither is watching porn or playing video games.
Just cut/cap their power supply.
Or maybe power companies should not be policing morality. As long as I pay my bill, what I do with the power is none of their concern.
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> Or maybe power companies should not be policing morality.
It's not about morality. It's about contracts: the city council often has a contract with the power company to supply cheaper energy to its inhabitants in exchange for dam building permission, right of way, etc. That makes sense, since the city's job is to do exactly that. But the amount of power granted this way is naturally capped, that makes sense too (for the power company).
Wise up before emptying your neolib bowels all over the place. That s
Re:How about denying service? (Score:5, Informative)
The crypto miners are using over 1000X more power than the standard home. No household cannabis crop is going to use that much power. FTFA, one miner used 33% of the power for the entire town.
And if you actually read the PSC rule, they didn't increase the rates for cryptominers. They increased the rates for heavy users:
"To mitigate the impact on existing customers, the Commission will allow municipal power authorities to create a new tariff focusing on high-density load customers that do not qualify for economic development assistance and have a maximum demand exceeding 300 kW and a load density that exceeds 250 kWh per square foot per year, a usage amount far higher than traditional commercial customers."
http://www3.dps.ny.gov/pscweb/WebFileRoom.nsf/Web/52BF38680307E75E85258251006476F0/$File/pr18018.pdf?OpenElement
My house uses about 4 kWh/ft^2 per year. The rule applies to people using 60 times that. No electrical heating (household or weed) will match that.
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You know what's funny? Here in my 3rd world country, I could apply for Industrial power, pay an installation tax for 380V power and then mine away as much as I desire, while paying FAR LESS per KW/h than a home user would.
I guess 'murica has it backwards...
Re:How about denying service? (Score:5, Insightful)
You know what's funny? Here in my 3rd world country, I could apply for Industrial power, pay an installation tax for 380V power and then mine away as much as I desire, while paying FAR LESS per KW/h than a home user would.
I guess 'murica has it backwards...
America is mostly like that too. I think we should be going the opposite direction though. I think we should stop giving bulk discounts for electricity or maybe even charge more for electricity to heavy users. If we are really concerned with conservation, charging that same if not more for energy usage to heavy users would help reduce the demand for fossil fuels where it matters.
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"charging that same if not more for energy usage to heavy users would help reduce the demand for fossil fuels where it matters."
Only it wouldn't. It would increase the price of the end product, that's all.
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"charging that same if not more for energy usage to heavy users would help reduce the demand for fossil fuels where it matters."
Only it wouldn't. It would increase the price of the end product, that's all.
You're assuming that the heavy users are all factories. The person with a 6k sqft house generally uses more energy than the person with a 3k sqft house who uses more than the person with a 1k sqft house. Just like when gas prices go up demand for large vehicles go down, if utilities went up for larger houses then the demand for larger houses would go down and demand for more energy efficiency would go up.
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Home users are home users, no matter the size of the home. Having them pay differently is discriminating.
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Home users are home users, no matter the size of the home. Having them pay differently is discriminating.
In most places they already pay differently. They pay less per kwh. We shouldn't be giving a discount for wasting more energy. We don't do that for gas and there are a ton of situations like taxes where we have rich paying more. What you tax you get less of. I would much rather see us tax energy usage than income. This would also solve the whole millionaire paying less taxes because his income is from investments. We should tax consumption of finite resources not income.
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What is even more bizarre in y opinion is the way my utility has a base rate and then 5 tiers for residential. The base is quite cheap and you gett 500KWH/mo at that rate. Then a significant bump for 500-1000, another from 1000-1500, ... Churches get a break, and then super big industrials get a break. Middle size biz gets a screw. Power pricing has become like taxes, the whim of politicians.
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There is not really anything bizarre about that. The utility knows what the base residential usage is, and they know what the big industrial usage is/will be (by contract). That allows them to pre-buy fuel, plan generating capacity, etc to cover that usage. The 'high usage' residentials are a big unknown, and unknowns are expensive.
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Except the city can predict every home's usage based on weather and prior usage. They even show your prior usage by month for the past year on every bill. Nope, at least for austin it is totally about guiding your usage to what they think you should use, 500KWH/mo year round. Now the Nat Gas supplier on the other hand charges a flat rate and gives a slight tweak to the rate based on weather normalization, or the exact opposite of what the electric company does. When the winter is warm, rate is bumped slight
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Depends on where you are. Some places require businesses to buy power from the power company because they could generate power for far less than the Government can. So sometimes they can run it for say a day or 3 days... sometimes certain days a month. Some places don't care, run it all you want. Depends on how the local government is. They can be real assholes or they can be very useful. Where I am they seem to be useful, so far.
They're talking about household power, however. That's a big deal with all the
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I think its a reasoned response, but unfortunately I see them then skirting the issue just by dividing the mining load across more accounts. Put up a bunch of sheds and register each as a different account, etc.
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This isn't really anything new. Power companies do this all the time. Electrons for irrigation are different than those used for residences.
Here's [bbec.org] a link to my power co-op's rates.
Now, if you want cheap power, go to Grant County in Washington...the Public Utility District there owns two hydroelectric dams, so electricity is cheap AND plentiful. (hint: that's a big reason Microsoft went there, followed quickly by Yahoo. Then eBay, and Intuit, Microsoft again...but I digress)
It's the original anti net neu
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not a basic need.
Neither is watching porn
Watch it there, buddy. You are treading in dangerous territory.
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It's kind of a problem, since the energy production of the Earth is finite, and pollution affects everyone. If a rich person goes to an impoverished village during a drought and buys up all the grain, and burns it, actually, it is many people's concern.
Libertarianism is great and all when there are infinite resources.
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Neither is posting on Slashdot a "basic need".
In the words of Eddie Valient, "Everybody's got to have a hobby."
They happen to have picked a hobby that, at least for the moment, pays for itself, and then some.
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From the new PSC rule:
"To mitigate the impact on existing customers, the Commission will allow municipal power authorities to create a new tariff focusing on high-density load customers that do not qualify for economic development assistance and have a maximum demand exceeding 300 kW and a load density that exceeds 250 kWh per square foot per year, a usage amount far higher than traditional commercial customers."
http://www3.dps.ny.gov/pscweb/WebFileRoom.nsf/Web/52BF38680307E75E85258251006476F0/$File/pr18018
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Heavy non-industrial users were getting same rates as households.
What you quoted doesn't say that. It refers to "traditional commercial customers".
This is the right way to do it, and shame on the summary author for lying about the actual rules. It shouldn't be earth-shattering news that a power company has high rates for heavy users. Why didn't the cities and the PSC consider this when they implemented the rates in the beginning? If aluminum smelting was a more portable operation, they probably would have triggered this response decades ago.
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Good, current cryptocurrency is useless (Score:4, Interesting)
Cryptocurrencies need to become actual currency, not artificial investment tools that produce nothing of significant value while wasting valuable power and hardware.
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Re: Good, current cryptocurrency is useless (Score:2)
Yes, GP is an ignorant fool. Slash moderation has ultimately served to reward posters who speak confidently about anything regardless of their knowledge. With such a diverse range of topics, the odds of getting a knowledgeable moderator on any given topic are very slim. The /. model works for general knowledge posts and random crapposts, but not for anything deep and/or technical.
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Yes, GP is an ignorant fool. Slash moderation has ultimately served to reward posters who speak confidently about anything regardless of their knowledge.
Imagine the irony if your post were to get modded up.
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Yes, GP is an ignorant fool. Slash moderation has ultimately served to reward posters who speak confidently about anything regardless of their knowledge.
Imagine the irony if your post were to get modded up.
Is it just me or have people forgotten the meaning of irony?
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> Cryptographic blockchains should be run for maximum possible efficiency, the distributed proof of transfer suffers nothing from being efficient
There are plenty of other uses of blockchain technology, including currencies that do not require that much of a verification.
Second blockchain platform is Ethereum which is used also for distributed computing.
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What would be ideal would be more cryptocurrencies that use proof of storage, not proof of work. This would provide two benefits. It would first lower the amount of power wasted to twiddle numbers. Second, it would urge storage makers to increase storage density and make higher capacity drives for less cash, benefiting everyone.
Cryptominers don't get subsidized rates (Score:5, Informative)
Keep in mind that the only thing that is really happening here is that only a fixed amount of electricity is available each month at subsidized pricing rates. The only change here is that crypto miners get lowest priority of subsidized power. For example, lets say that every month the city gets 40 gWh of subsidized electricity from their contract with the power company that permitted the construction of a hydro dam within city limits. On a given month, lets say the residential and non-crypto mining industrial buildings in the city use 35 gWh of power, and the miners use 15 gWh. In this scenario, the miners will get 5 gWh at the subsidized rates, but will have to pay regular price on the remaining 10 gWh past the city's quota of subsidized power.
Seems pretty reasonable to me... the miners still get access to some cheap power, so its better than what they would get elsewhere, but at the same time the consequences of their excessive power consumption doesn't end up forcing the residential customers of the city to buy a percentage of their power at full price, which was what happened previously.
Re:Cryptominers don't get subsidized rates (Score:5, Informative)
So the extra electricity used by crytocurrency mining comes entirely from fossil fuel plants. Even if they're located in an area which gets its electricity from hydro, their extra power consumption means there's less hydro power available to send to neighboring locales. That neighboring locale has to make up that electricity shortfall somehow, so a coal or gas plant near them ends up burning more fuel to generate it.
This is why it's pointless building your company next to a renewable power source just so you can advertise that your company is being green. Unless that renewable plant was built specifically to generate power for you (i.e. it wouldn't have been built otherwise), all you're doing is depriving someone else of renewable energy that they would've gotten if you hadn't built your company there. You haven't reduced the country's fossil fuel consumption, you've just pushed your fossil fuel consumption onto someone else just so you can claim the bragging rights of being green when in fact you're having zero net effect on the nation's pollution generation.
It's also why you should try to conserve electricity even if you live in an area with cheap electricity rates (e.g. Pacific Northwest, home of U.S. hydro power). Every kWh of hydro power you don't use is a kWh which gets transmitted to another part of the country, meaning some coal or gas plant somewhere has to generate a kWh less energy, and the air is that much cleaner for it.
Real reduction in fossil fuel emissions comes only two ways - reducing the country's overall power consumption, and increasing the percentage of power generated by nuclear and renewables. Cryptocurrency mining violates the first, so is just bad for the country regardless of where you do it. (Though there is an exception if you can do it during winter in an area which would've used electricity for heating anyway. It doesn't matter if the heat comes from an electric radiator or from a massive bank of GPUs. Both are electricity-in, heat-out at 100% conversion efficiency.)
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This is why it's pointless building your company next to a renewable power source just so you can advertise that your company is being green. Unless that renewable plant was built specifically to generate power for you (i.e. it wouldn't have been built otherwise), all you're doing is depriving someone else of renewable energy that they would've gotten if you hadn't built your company there. You haven't reduced the country's fossil fuel consumption, you've just pushed your fossil fuel consumption onto someone else just so you can claim the bragging rights of being green when in fact you're having zero net effect on the nation's pollution generation.
Doesn't that contradict your statement about power generation being national? If the effects of increased power consumption are globalized, then it wouldn't matter where you put your factory/business/house/whatever, right?
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The US grid is not national. It's broken up into 9 regions, with only minor transmitting between them. And most power is used quite close to the generation site.
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I agree until last few sentences:
(Though there is an exception if you can do it during winter in an area which would've used electricity for heating anyway. It doesn't matter if the heat comes from an electric radiator or from a massive bank of GPUs. Both are electricity-in, heat-out at 100% conversion efficiency.)
Very few people use electric resistance heaters on a large scale. Typically heat pumps are used, with efficiencies far greater than 100%. (E.g., 3x to 4x more efficient according to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heat_pump ).
Additionally, we are typically talking about mining on a scale far larger than one would need to heat a house.
Third, going along with your point about additional power usage coming from fossil fuels. Conversion efficiencies for fossil fuel power plants in
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Typically heat pumps are used, with efficiencies far greater than 100%.
Umm, I think one of the LAWS of thermodynamics would like to talk to you.
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Umm, I think one of the LAWS of thermodynamics would like to talk to you.
They're not so much laws as...guidelines.
That's the great thing about heat pumps. A Joule of energy moves more than a Joule of heat around. For example, you use 100 Joules of electricity to move 200 Joules of heat from the ground to your house. Effectively, that's like having a 200% efficient electric heater. (Of course, I'm making up those numbers. The actual numbers will be way different.)
Technically, your air conditioner is a heat pump too. It uses a Joule to move more than a Joule of heat out of your ho
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I understand heat pumps.
I humbly suggest you don't completely understand heat pumps. They heat up your house while cooling down down the earth. Similarly, an AC cools down your house while heating up the outside up the air. It's just moving energy around, not creating any. This is, by the way, why opening your refrigerator door won't cool your house down.
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I humbly suggest you don't completely understand heat pumps.
I humbly suggest that I understand them better than you do.
It's just moving energy around, not creating any.
You truly do not understand the laws of thermodynamics, do you? Nobody is suggesting that energy is created. But, if you "move around" 200J of heat using 100J of energy, then have an engine that produces just 101J from letting that 200J go back, then you've gained 1J in the process.
That's called a perpetual motion machine -- you get more out of the system than you put in.
Now, either you were spouting nonsense when you claimed that your heat pump
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I humbly suggest you don't completely understand heat pumps.
I humbly suggest that I understand them better than you do.
You clearly do not. The first AC you replied to gave you a good starting point to educate yourself.
A heat pump [wikipedia.org] really does produce 3W of heat per 1W of electricity consumed. It's not magic, it's not perpetual motion, and it does not violate thermodynamics. Follow the link and learn.
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So the extra electricity used by crytocurrency mining comes entirely from fossil fuel plants. Even if they're located in an area which gets its electricity from hydro, their extra power consumption means there's less hydro power available to send to neighboring locales. That neighboring locale has to make up that electricity shortfall somehow, so a coal or gas plant near them ends up burning more fuel to generate it.
You are assigning some sort of rank to electricity usage that doesn't exist. Why can't I say that my Bitcoin mining operation is using the hydropower and the old couple down the street trying to stay warm are causing the demand for fossil fuel generation. Or the rich guy recharging his Tesla?
It's more accurate to assume that everyone's demand or energy savings comes out of the same mix of generation. And a kWh saved either in insulating one's house or switching to efficient lighting is the same as one save
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It's more accurate to assume that everyone's demand or energy savings comes out of the same mix of generation.
Pacific Power calling. We'll happily sell you green power (power from renewable sources like wind) at a higher rate than standard old power from whatever source we're using today. We don't paint the electrons green or use a different wire to send them to you so you can't tell them apart, but we'll charge you for it anyway.
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Unless that renewable plant was built specifically to generate power for you (i.e. it wouldn't have been built otherwise), all you're doing is depriving someone else of renewable energy that they would've gotten if you hadn't built your company there.
Interesting example of this. The Safe Harbor Dam in PA was built with several turbines dedicated to powering the Pennsylvania Railroad (now Amtrak)'s 25 Hz overhead lines. Without the railroad as a customer there would have been less turbines installed in the initial construction, so the PRR was partially a "green" company in that sense.
Over the years many more turbines were added (all 60 Hz), so it stands to reason that there would be the same number today regardless of the original customers. So at wha
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Gigawatt hour has a capital G, by the way.
milli and kilo would have lowercase prefix.
mWh milliwatt hour
kWh kilowatt hour
MWh megawatt hour
GWh gigawatt hour
TWh terawatt hour
(Ideally the h for hour would be separated from GW, but that’s a separate issue, and only done in proper typesetting.)
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Thank you, Dr Pedant, for that learned and insightful commentary.
Oh, and 2^20 bytes is a mebibyte, one MiB, not a megabyte.
Pedantically yours,
Dr. Pedant.
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Keep in mind that the only thing that is really happening here is that only a fixed amount of electricity is available each month at subsidized pricing rates.
It's not a subsidized rate. It's the rate the city is being charged. The city has failed by refusing to buy enough power, a scarcity that is created by city managers not physical limits.
The only change here is that crypto miners get lowest priority of subsidized power.
Did you read the same summary I did? The change is that the cities are being allowed to charge more for certain uses of power. That's not getting "lowest priority", that's getting the same priority but paying more.
Why not just implement tiered pricing like every other electric company I've ever dealt with has? That way EVE
when they said "Net Neutrality repeal" (Score:2, Insightful)
I did not know how far this would go.
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And when they'll add powewalls, the situation will become even more interesting!
You insensitive electrical clods!
Old man yells at supply and demand (Score:5, Interesting)
My suspicion based on the summary talking about "towns with cheap electricity" is that miners were expecting to go unnoticed in residential areas while consuming commercial levels of electricity. The summary talks about a jump in costs to residential customers, and cryptomining is pretty squarely a commercial activity.
Long story short: It probably looked exactly like people opened up a bunch of commercial endeavors and thought they were going to only be charged residential rates. Residential neighbors don't like subsidizing one another involuntarily.
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And certainly, not some asshole mining cryptocurrency.
Want to get rich doing that? Fine, but as soon as my bill goes up to cover your costs, then fuck the hell off.
The problem is these miners are relying on other people to help pay the true costs of what they do. That's not our fucking problem.
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The problem is these miners are relying on other people to help pay the true costs of what they do. That's not our fucking problem.
And that's what leads me to suggest not subsidizing electricity at all. Then I don't have to worry about what you're using electricity for because I'm not paying for it. Simple, no?
Back here on Planet Earth, it seems a reasonable compromise is to just have tiered pricing. We do that for all sorts of things. You pay an artificially low rate for the first few units (which, ironically enough are the ones most valuable to me so I should be paying the highest rates) and higher rates as you use more. You set the
Re:Old man yells at supply and demand (Score:5, Interesting)
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Maybe I'm wrong, but I'm pretty sure most municipalities have some form of business licensing. So if you're running a bakery, they know because you put that on your license.
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Unless you take into account scarcity. Prices are still high because supply can't keep up with demand and the GPU manufacturers hesitate to increase supply because the crypto craze might end soon.
Re:Different type of electricity? (Score:5, Interesting)
You could think about it for ten seconds? Or you could read the article?
If your bakery does that then you get the higher rates. If your crypto mining doesn't then you don't.
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No mouth unopened (Score:2)
I'm right there with them and feel those communities' pains. I hope th...
New York has since imposed an 18-month moratorium...to "protect and enhance the city's natural, historic, cultural and electrical resources.
Wtf, politicians! Now I want the miners to win >:-(
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I'm surprised that's not already happening. The profit margins for mining crypto are so thin now that you basically need "free" power for the math to work out in your favor.
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Go off the grid. (Score:2)
I don't know if crypto currencies have value. I know generating your own power does have value. Go for it.
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Arbitrage is fleeting (Score:2)
I would classify this as spatial arbitrage [wikipedia.org], or perhaps regulatory arbitrage if they were taking advantage of the way power was supplied to large consumers during certain times.
Apply to electronic currency/stock trading (Score:2)
Huge server farms of automated trading, suck up tons of power ... will these rising rates apply to them, too ?
Keep going (Score:2)
Damn! (Score:2)
Wtf? (Score:1)
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Never will. And never have.
This isn't even in the top 100 "reasons one should not live in new york."