evanbaer on Nostr: 2 years ago, I started building a hashrate marketplace and learned a few things about ...
2 years ago, I started building a hashrate marketplace and learned a few things about #bitcoin mining, money laundering and KYC.
When I started Rigly.io in 2022, I wanted to offer a way to mine #Bitcoin w/o buying hardware.
I wasn't the first person to have this idea, there are 2 other hashrate markets (NiceHash and Mining Rig Rentals)
Both sell hashrate for more btc than it will earn via mining...
This struck me as odd.
Who trades hard-earned bitcoin .... for hashrate to earn less bitcoin?
My first thought: This must be money laundering🚫
And then I did my own research and learned about KYC (Know Your Customer)
Whenever you buy bitcoin, you must verify yourself with the same level of ID as opening a bank account..
If you are treat your bitcoin like a bank balance (and trust your exchange) maybe KYC is no big deal..
But let's take a closer look at what KYC means:
1) Do you want your personal info stored forever in the exchange's database? 📸📄
2) Do you trust the exchange to keep this info separate from your bitcoin? 🙅♂️
Many answer "No" and choose to self-custody🔐
However the KYC data - including purchase history (!) - is still on the exchange.
This means your personal info is still tied to your bitcoin even when you self-custody (!)
And so many people choose to mine *new* bitcoin and get their privacy back⛏️
These are the people who are buying hashrate.
It isn't money laundering.
It's people taking their privacy back (by mining bitcoin)
^ I know this is all probably old news to a lot of bitcoiners, but it was new to me.
Published at
2024-03-13 15:13:17Event JSON
{
"id": "4ade36959008d12e05bbcda0294c0ac04583e3dd05d86139d748d8cba18c1ec5",
"pubkey": "3d2c8ac838883378f59e1bc080e1f69cc3c212c109b99e41cc21ecac5cff1ff0",
"created_at": 1710342797,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
[
"t",
"bitcoin"
],
[
"t",
"bitcoin"
]
],
"content": "2 years ago, I started building a hashrate marketplace and learned a few things about #bitcoin mining, money laundering and KYC.\n\nWhen I started Rigly.io in 2022, I wanted to offer a way to mine #Bitcoin w/o buying hardware.\n\nI wasn't the first person to have this idea, there are 2 other hashrate markets (NiceHash and Mining Rig Rentals)\n\nBoth sell hashrate for more btc than it will earn via mining...\n\nThis struck me as odd.\n\nWho trades hard-earned bitcoin .... for hashrate to earn less bitcoin?\n\nMy first thought: This must be money laundering🚫\n\nAnd then I did my own research and learned about KYC (Know Your Customer)\n\nWhenever you buy bitcoin, you must verify yourself with the same level of ID as opening a bank account..\n\nIf you are treat your bitcoin like a bank balance (and trust your exchange) maybe KYC is no big deal..\n\nBut let's take a closer look at what KYC means:\n\n1) Do you want your personal info stored forever in the exchange's database? 📸📄\n\n2) Do you trust the exchange to keep this info separate from your bitcoin? 🙅♂️\n\nMany answer \"No\" and choose to self-custody🔐\n\nHowever the KYC data - including purchase history (!) - is still on the exchange.\n\nThis means your personal info is still tied to your bitcoin even when you self-custody (!)\n\nAnd so many people choose to mine *new* bitcoin and get their privacy back⛏️\n\nThese are the people who are buying hashrate.\n\nIt isn't money laundering.\n\nIt's people taking their privacy back (by mining bitcoin)\n\n^ I know this is all probably old news to a lot of bitcoiners, but it was new to me.",
"sig": "9b978cbbda56d97d5c3ad379d0bcb1d84aa6e20767b392dbda91f1c2070225db5a699e550ca7314398735467bc4f96aba8aa6849c040df0dc3cb3bdfb55c1b2e"
}