eric76 said:
Adverse Event said:
eric76 said:
Not Coach Jimbo said:
eric76 said:
As Bitcoin tumbles, at what point do the miners decide that the costs of mining becomes greater than the rewards of mining?
When that happens, how can Bitcoin not lose the entirity of its remaining "value"?
It's been more expensive to mine than It's worth before during this part of its cycle...
Youd probably be better off if you spent time learning about it instead of assuming you know the answer and writing "gotchas"
Why not answer the question?
The answer is bitcoin's difficulty adjustment.
Now you tell us what bitcoin's difficulty adjustment means.
The difficulty of mining is adjusted to maintain a more or less constant rate of creating blocks of bitcoin.
But that's not an answer. It affects the answer by reducing the costs of mining when necessary, but it doesn't address the fundamentals.
Okay. Let's work the exercise together.
Cost to mine makes x% of miners not immediately profitable.
Miners shut down their non-profitable cpus.
Bitcoin blocks take on average more than 10 minutes to mine.
~2weeks later (based on block height) the algorithm adjusted to make it easier (and less costly) to mine.
Miners turn unprofitable miners on now that it's feasible.
But, the unpriced aspect of MINING versus BUYING bitcoin is that this mined bitcoin is KYC-free bitcoin.
KYC-free bitcoin, imo, is far more valuable than recognized. And I predict miners will run for longer "unprofitably" to attain these bitcoin.
How does bitcoin's difficulty adjustment not answer your questions? The algorithm adjusts making mining easier or harder over and over forever.
What bitcoin’s detractors don’t understand is monetary economics, computer science, software engineering, network protocols, and electrical systems.
It ain't much, but it's honest Proof of Work.