Read more.'Proof of space and time' coin mainly affecting 4TB to 18TB HDD pricing.
Read more.'Proof of space and time' coin mainly affecting 4TB to 18TB HDD pricing.
I'm sure I've heard of space based crypto before but cant remember what it was called, not sure what new things this brings.
Who comes up with these cryptocurrencies.... it really feels like it's a case of just picking things that will then become short supply if used for cryptocurrency, which in turn increases the cost of 'joining in' while screwing over everyone else who isn't interested in it.
Hmmm.. do any online services still offer unlimited free storage?
Seems like an attempt to generate hype - proof of storage coins have been around for years and none have really caught on yet, so what makes this one any different given it's not even tradeable yet?
Don't worry, I got the joke
DanceswithUnix (20-04-2021)
I don't believe it.
Marketing includes telling minor lies and BOOM, cha-ching. Lots of cash.
There's a nice new motherboard for your 'proof of storage rig' mentioned by PC Watch today. It has 32 SATA connectors.
That seems like an awfully inefficient way to do it, and a massive PCB, compared to say an add-in card.
Jumping on the speculative bandwagon quickly enough though!
I forget what it was called, but I think there was one that was meant to be a coin-based way of backing up files, but I don't recall how that went or how effective it was in reality.
Exactly, this just screws over people who need the storage. This whole 'proof of space and time' doesn't matter because it's not actually doing anything that helps anyone - it's Bitcoin itself all over again, in that it's got no actual value but that which people are willing to pay for it in the hopes of getting rich quick.
How that can count as eco-friendly, when most non-crypto have actual data storage needs for their files that would obviously make much more sense on the hard drives, baffles me.
I also shudder at the thought of potentially unscrupulous Chia miners offloading their failing HDDs onto unsuspecting people.
Last edited by Output; 28-04-2021 at 12:19 AM. Reason: Added nightmare scenario.
The whole concept is purely parasitic.
And yeah, there's nothing remotely eco-friendly about it; it's ridiculous to even make that claim. No-one is naïve enough to think that a cryptocurrency capable of making a profit would only be used in existing "spare capacity" as claimed.
CAT-THE-FIFTH (28-04-2021)
I.e. offsetting carbon-producing power sources on the grid.
Renewables operate as baseload, any additional load added to the grid i.e. mining farms, means more load-following supply, nearly always fossil fuels. Another ridiculous argument made by the tulip fanatics.
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