Withdrawals Frozen at Crypto Mining Firm Poolin Amid 'Liquidity Problems' (theblock.co) 68
Poolin, one of the world's biggest crypto mining pools, is suspending bitcoin and ether withdrawals from its wallet service due to "liquidity problems." From a report: "As you may have known, Poolin Wallet is currently facing some liquidity problems due to recent increasing demands on withdrawals. But please be assured, all user assets are safe and the company's net worth is positive," the firm said in an announcement Monday. Poolin said that it would "make a snapshot of the remaining BTC and ETH balances on pool on September 6th to work out the balances." "The daily mined coins after September 6th will be normally paid out per day. Other coins are not affected. The details of payout schedule for remaining balances will be released when details are set," the post continued. The Beijing-based company is among the latest industry firms to suspend withdrawals due to liquidity problems amid this year's decline in crypto asset prices. Lenders Voyager Digital and Vauld both halted withdrawals in July. Voyager has since begun restoring some access to customers.
shocked! (Score:1)
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Where's James Stewart when you need him?
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company's net worth is positive (Score:3)
But we're suspending your withdrawals to save all that for ourselves ...
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We can't steal your money if we let you take it out.
PT Barnum theorum (Score:1)
There may well be a sucker born every minute, but it's looking like that's no longer fast enough to keep the Bit-scheme afloat.
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Amazing (Score:3)
These crypto companies seem to have more liquidity problems than a desert.
Why is that?
Re: Amazing (Score:1)
Only works when you don't cash out (Score:2)
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That's neglecting the considerable chance someone will come along and forge a transaction. Even when the people backing a cryptocurrency have good intentions, it only takes one (inside job or outside hack) to run away with all of it.
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It seems crypto is a great investment as long as everyone involved is satisfied by looking at an ever growing number in their wallets, but never try to take anything out. As soon as "investors" try to cash out, well, sinking crypto currency values and liquidity problems reliably emerge.
News at eleven.
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It seems crypto is a great investment as long as everyone involved is satisfied by looking at an ever growing number in their wallets, but never try to take anything out. As soon as "investors" try to cash out, well, sinking crypto currency values and liquidity problems reliably emerge.
That's literally the definition of a Ponzi scheme
Re: Only works when you don't cash out (Score:1)
That sounds just like the stock market.. that's why the stock market has regulations in place that when everyone sells, trading will be paused. Sounds familiar? E.g. NYSE "A market-wide trading halt can be triggered if the S&P 500 Index declines in price as compared to the prior dayâ(TM)s closing price of that index."
The dominos are all falling.. (Score:4, Insightful)
The dominos are all falling, and no one wants to be the last one holding the bag.
Enjoy the collapse, suckers. Stick to what works.
True, nothing ventured nothing gained -- but this whole crytpo thing definitely looks like tulips all over again.
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this whole crytpo thing definitely looks like tulips all over again.
It's going to take a while though. Too many people's lives have revolved around "free money!" for the last few years for them to let go easily.
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I doubt there are enough individuals in various coins to keep the scam going much longer. Consider the drop from 68k to 20k for Bitcoin is already shocking even in the down economy. It had no reason to be at 68k much less the current 20k. Eventually the bigger scammers who have been holding on for ever higher numbers will cut n run and it will descend to its natural real world value: zero.
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like an orbit of a planet, oh look its moving away, ohh look its coming back!
Cycles RULE the universe, from electron orbits to galactical orbits.
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Re: The dominos are all falling.. (Score:2)
LOL Your moneys gone you dumb apes (Score:2, Insightful)
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The real question is "Why hasn't every one divested by now?"
Is everyone blocked from withdrawing now?
Are people still hoping crypto goes back up so much that they are blind to the most likely situation where they lose everything?
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I would say 3. Blind.
Anecdote time.
My nephew (27) is a total crypto bro. His answer to everything is always, "hold, it'll go back up". Even after I told him I worked for a crypto company for a while both internally and with customers and told him all the ridiculous stupid shit going on didn't even scratch his blind belief in crypto. He has given his mom "advice" on which alt coins to buy going on 2 years now. Every single bit of advice lost her money. 100% failure rate. He's running a miner in her ho
Is momentum picking up? (Score:1)
Two stories, back to back [slashdot.org], about crypto companies having liquidity problems. Add in the other stories and BTC back below 20K, and it looks like crypto has a problem on its hands. Namely, it's not backed by anything other than, "Trust me, bro."
History repeats itself (Score:2)
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One reason I still have trouble believing crypto currency is money is that there aren’t commercials for money.
Thank you, thank you, no applause, thank you!
QFT.
No celebrities were on TV advertising "Dollars". That's your clue, right there.
The end result of all Ponzi schemes. (Score:1)
Bitcoins back below 20,000 (Score:2)
Basically the entire mining market is about to collapse. They have huge amounts of money invested in not just gpus they can dump on eBay but custom Asics bett
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I expect any effects away from people invested in the actual coins themselves to be extremely isolated. Only a handful of municipalities were stupid enough to buy into this, and given where they're mostly located they'll probably find a convoluted way to place the blame on illegal immigrants.
People who "saved all their lives" are almost certainly not managing their retirement money themselves.
Given the specialized hardware involved, the only data centers which will be impacted are those that were built expr
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https://www.abcactionnews.com/... [abcactionnews.com].
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I think the amount of people who lost their life savings to BTC is very small in the broader economy. Particularly compared to mortgages, which is where the majority of Americans' net worth comes from.
Places that built data centers and electrical capacity just for mining also seem few and far between. El Salvador, some nowhere place in Siberia, a random town in Texas. Slashdot tells us about these experiments, they take up a lot of our mindshare. It's easy to lose sight of how small these ventures are in th
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Company's worth net positive (Score:2)
Rest assured! (Score:2)
Rest assured? PHEW! I was about to start having a major panic attack, but I'm glad that I can rest easy now!
That announcement tells me a lot (Score:2)
Wait.... it's a BEIJING based crypto pool? Hahahaha nevermind I missed that. If anyone gets even pennies on the dollar out
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it's extremely unlikely that a solo miner will ever find the solution to a block, so people who want to mine join a goup of other miners and use software to manage and record the mining effort. this is known as a mining pool: where miners join their cryptohashing efforts together hoping to find the solution for the next block, thus earning the block reward. the pool software then pays out shares of the reward to the miners based on how much cryptohashing they put in.
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Yes but... with additional overhead to the people managing the pool.
Sort of like the gold rush where the only people getting rich were shovel sellers.
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I really hope you just left out a "not" just before "dead"...
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Horrific timing (Score:4, Interesting)
ETH miners don't have two weeks. They have just over **nine days** until mining is over forever. I hope there aren't many ETH miners out there using Poolin's wallet service.
Crypto itself is not sketchy - it's a risky investment (especially outside of BTC and ETH), but that's it.
A mining pool also operating a wallet service on the other hand, is sketchy as hell. It's like letting your employer hold the money they pay you until you ask to take some out so you can pay your rent or go out to dinner - a ridiculously stupid proposition even without the concept of letting them make up their own currencies to save that value in.
Anyone planning to have more than $100 invested in crypto at any point should be smart enough to be directing their mining profits to an offline hardware wallet where it is literally impossible for this to happen (and where it is not happening - note those who are mining with them but not using their wallet service are unaffected by these "liquidity issues"), or if they aren't mining, they should keep it all offline and only move it online to trade.
If you are naive enough to trust a third party with all your money, just use a bank and hope they don't rip you off or get ordered by the government to freeze or seize all your money. At least you get FDIC insurance on the non-crypto part that way.
If you don't trust a third party, WTF are you doing leaving it in a third party controlled wallet???
It's sad to see all these scam companies with their own useless tokens (especially the so-called stablecoins) being treated as if they are the same as the legitimate crypto companies like mining pools that do not run their own wallets.
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No, there are plenty of non-scam mining pools that take just enough to keep the pool running (usually less than 1%), and it is worth it to the pool's users to keep it running. With strangers and in large groups with hundreds or thousands of pool users, it's reasonable to take a small amount for administration.
A (legit) mining pool is basically the same idea as a lottery ticket pool you might be part of at work, or in a group of friends, where everyone puts in a small amount of their _own_ resources - in tha
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"legitimate"
You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.
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Looking forward to another flood of used but good condition GPUs hitting eBay.
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If you are naive enough to trust a third party with all your money, just use a bank and hope they don't rip you off or get ordered by the government to freeze or seize all your money.
Why is it naive to trust a bank? I mean about 330million people in the USA use a bank and we don't hear any stories of them rushing off with your money.
I love these kind of anti-establishment comments, the kind that somehow are made on the supposition that civilisation hasn't functioned perfectly fine in stable countries for literal centuries.
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Crypto itself is not sketchy - it's a risky investment (especially outside of BTC and ETH), but that's it.
Please explain what the "investment" is? Because in the end, it looks like you do not own anything other than a hash that has no value other than the hope that someone dumber than you will come along and pay more for it than you did.
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You don't own a hash.
Deja Vu all over again (Score:2)
lump the crypto and NFT stories together (Score:4, Interesting)
Rather than every new disaster, couldn't you just post a weekly digest of the funniest bits?
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https://web3isgoinggreat.com/ [web3isgoinggreat.com]
Re: lump the crypto and NFT stories together (Score:1)
Fucking Idiots and Scammers (Score:2)
Can we now finally state unequivocally that the crypto industry has been funded by fucking idiots who have made a pack of scammers wealth. And can we now start heavily regulating the industry, and stop these bullshit stories about farmers in Brazil and Indonesia benefitting from what really is a series of fucking Ponzi schemes. Every cryptobro should be rotting in prison.
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Regulate the industry? We already have laws making pyramid and Ponzi schemes illegal.
No need for new laws. Just start arresting people under current laws. They fit perfectly.
Not sure this is fraud (Score:1)
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