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1. tgtwea+(OP)[view] [source] 2025-12-17 22:42:31
Monero's proof of work (RandomX) is very asic-resistant and although it generates a very small amount of earnings, if you exploit a vulnerability like this with thousands or tens of thousands of nodes, it can add up (8 modern cores 24/7 on Monero would be in the 10-20c/day per node range). OPs Vps probably generated about $1 for those script kiddies.
replies(2): >>pixl97+A4 >>asdff+Ci
2. pixl97+A4[view] [source] 2025-12-17 23:11:24
>>tgtwea+(OP)
Hit 1000 servers and it starts adding up. Especially if you live somewhere with a low cost of living.
3. asdff+Ci[view] [source] 2025-12-18 01:02:45
>>tgtwea+(OP)
So $40 a year? Does that imply all monero is mined like this because it's clearly not cost effective at all to mine legitimately?
replies(1): >>beefle+1H
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4. beefle+1H[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-12-18 05:46:18
>>asdff+Ci
I think so, but it is hard to say. Could be a lot of people with extra power (or stolen power), but their own equipment. I mine myself with waste solar power
replies(1): >>Sohcah+8L2
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5. Sohcah+8L2[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-12-18 19:19:58
>>beefle+1H
Another option:

Deliberate heat generation.

If it's cold and you're going to be running a heater anyways, then if your heat is resistive, then running a cryptominer is just as efficient and returns a couple dollars back to you. It effectively becomes "free" relative to running the heater.

If you use a heat pump, or you rely on burning something (natural gas, wood, whatever) to generate heat, then the math changes.

replies(1): >>tgtwea+8c5
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6. tgtwea+8c5[view] [source] [discussion] 2025-12-19 15:01:52
>>Sohcah+8L2
Yeah the calculus on that becomes tricky when you have heat pumps since the coefficient of performance is >1 vs resistive heating (often 3-4 depending on the temperature).

I used a rack of GPUs to heat my house for a few years back when gpu mining was decently profitable, and my electricity bill was 3-4x more than with the heat pump - so you have to keep a close eye on the math when you're running at/under profitability.

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