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Ask Slashdot: Enterprise Bitcoin Mining For Go-Green Initiatives?

Supp0rtLinux writes "Bitcoins are currently trading around $75. I work for a very large organization. We have a fairly large HPC that is usually about 50% idle, as well as about 18K desktops on 4 campuses connected with dark fiber. All stay on 24x7 for after-hours AV scans (weekly) and backups (2-3x a week). All are leases that refresh every 2 years so all have fairly good CPU & RAM specs. As part of a go-green initiative a proposal has come up to use all the PCs for bitcoin in our own mining group; sort of like SETI-at-home style, but with a real dollar value return to us. Additionally, we would setup a queue in our HPC that dedicates 30% to BC mining when in use and up to 99.5% when no other jobs are running. The thought is that all the PCs are on 24x7 anyway and consuming resources so why not allow them to be useful 24x7 as well and generate bitcoins which can then be sold to offset the electrical costs of the running equipment and/or possibly even make a little profit. The guy with the idea says its a no-lose situation as if the price of bitcoins drops to below a certain level and is no longer a financially viable option, we simply stop the mining process. I'm curious what the Slashdot community thinks of this? " Read on for a few more details.

Supp0rtLinux continues, Is it viable? Would we generate enough revenue to cover our electrical costs even with CPUs running at 100% utilization all evening? Are there any security risks? Any thoughts on network impact? The consensus is that the proposal sounds good, but no one has enough info to make a knowledgeable decision either way. As a follow-up question and one that came up after the initial proposal, this entire idea has us wondering why the botnet/malware guys aren't doing this already? It would seem like a trivial task to take a botnet of hijacked PCs and have them do BC mining instead of spreading more malware and generate real revenue for the owner's of the botnets wouldn't it?

18 of 312 comments (clear)

  1. Ask the (ABC) Australian Broadcasting Corp. by Macfox · · Score: 4, Informative

    Why not ask this guy? Seemed to work out well for him.

    http://www.smh.com.au/technology/technology-news/secret-money-abc-virtual-currency-racket-probe-20110623-1ggp6.html

    On a serious note. If it were viable, the practice would be wide spread. The serious miners have moved onto purpose built hardware.

    http://hardware.slashdot.org/story/12/12/05/2242233/race-to-mine-bitcoins-drives-enthusiasts-into-the-chip-making-business

    --
    Area51 - We are watching...
    1. Re:Ask the (ABC) Australian Broadcasting Corp. by mea_culpa · · Score: 4, Interesting

      This.

      Connect a Kill A Watt and compare your energy usage under full and idle loads.
      My PC consumes about 60W idle and 250W under full load.
      10 years ago it would make sense to use spare clock cycles for side projects, today not so much.

    2. Re:Ask the (ABC) Australian Broadcasting Corp. by ElizabethGreene · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Unless your HPC cluster includes large numbers of FPGAs or GPUs, you'll be quite disappointed at the performance. If you do have GPUs then it depends on the integer operation performance of the chips. As a real world example, my 1 year old mid-range CPU mines at around 1Kh/second. The two $100 video cards in the box mine at 180Kh/s each. The $1500 Asic miners I bought last month mine at 60Gh/s each.

      CPU based mining is not worth the power required to mine it and manage the heat.

    3. Re:Ask the (ABC) Australian Broadcasting Corp. by ElizabethGreene · · Score: 4, Interesting

      s/Kh/Mh/g in the above, I said it wrong.

      CPU mining is measured in Khash/sec.
      GPU mining is measured in Mhash/sec.
      Asic mining is measured in Ghash/sec.
      Pool mining is measured in Thash/sec.

  2. Unlikely. by jythie · · Score: 5, Informative

    From what I have gathered, mining via CPUs is, at this point, not cost effective. It eats more power then it produces in bitcoins. The OP would probably get a better economic result by letting the computers go to sleep.

    1. Re:Unlikely. by n7ytd · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And no AV scans or backups. Unfortunately, not an option for our org but thanks for the info. Any resources or public data available for figuring out the value of BC mining? I've looked but can't find any...

      Would it not make sense to alter your AV scan and backup scripts to do their thing, then put the machines to sleep afterwards?

      If the goal is truly to "go green", using less electricity is the only way. If you're not looking to go green, but are instead looking to offset some of the money that you're spending now on electricity, turning the machines off will be orders of magnitude more effective than trying to offset the cost by mining and selling BitCoins.

      Plus, running 18,000 desktop machines at 100% will put an extra heat load on your HVAC systems, which aren't free to run from either environmental or monetary costs.

  3. Go Green by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    For a Go-Green initiative, maybe you should consider turning 18,000 computers off over night.

    1. Re:Go Green by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 5, Funny

      You misunderstood. "Go Green", as in mining bitcoins, each worth 75 greenbacks.

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    2. Re:Go Green by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "Lets go green by making all of our always on 18,000 desktops run at full load at all times."

      Makes sense to me.

  4. computers are terribly inefficient by SeanBlader · · Score: 4, Informative

    I bet your company ends up with a noticeably higher electricity bill, more so than you'd recover in bitcoins. I ran Seti@Home for a month on a single gaming grade system and my electricity bill jumped a staggering amount. But, I'd love to hear if I was wrong.

  5. Some Thoughts by eldavojohn · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Okay, frankly, I don't see the "Go-Green" aspect of this. Maybe I'm missing something here -- was that joke to make it sound eco friendly but actually reflecting the color of money? I'm lost as to how this would be environmentally friendly as opposed to your current situation unless that extra money is going to subsidize your enterprise using renewable energy or something ...

    One, it's a great idea and even if you don't move forward with this plan I think it's important to give the employee kudos for suggesting something new. If everyone came up with a half crazy/half ingenious idea you'd be able to try out a lot of innovative stuff. That said, I think there's some underlying costs you should evaluate up front: there needs to be an administrator for the Bitcoin mining software, (I assume you know this but) your electrical bill should rise up a bit to reflect the increased power draw when your cluster is crunching numbers and there needs to be a way to record any incidences where you think the BTC software ran into the day or inhibited a normal work related job on the server. That shouldn't be a deal breaker, just have a system in place to assess those monetary incursions on your business. It may also require you to do some interesting tax claims as you might "earn" so many bitcoins that your accounting department has to start including it on an asset sheet so that the books stay legal. I'm not an expert in this.

    Something that is important is that the sooner you get this up and running, the better. Read up on the distribution of bitcoins to understand what I mean.

    Is it viable? Would we generate enough revenue to cover our electrical costs even with CPUs running at 100% utilization all evening?

    Probably? The real problem is the volatility of BTC on trades and, if you become a major reserve of BTC, you would likely have difficulties realizing your USD valuations of BTC in one swift action. One day it could make sense and the next day it could be a bust all based on whether MtGox was hacked or some major holder cashed out. How exactly did you plan on evaluating these holdings?

    Personally, I wouldn't do this. I'd take a more entrepreneurial approach and attempt to lease CPU time to new customers. I know this practice has grown less profitable as people have been better equipped to set up their own clusters but what you might do is look into software that rents out your cluster by the hour and then seek out customers. As far as I know you can only expect a couple cents an hour per core on something like that but it slowly adds up. Plus, it's a little more legit and on the level.

    Another idea is to lease this downtime as CPU usage to a local university or high school or something and, whether they use it or not, you might be able to write off some of that donated time and save a little money on taxes or at least build good will.

    As a follow-up question and one that came up after the initial proposal, this entire idea has us wondering why the botnet/malware guys aren't doing this already? It would seem like a trivial task to take a botnet of hijacked PCs and have them do BC mining instead of spreading more malware and generate real revenue for the owner's of the botnets wouldn't it?

    I'm not an expert in this but I'm pretty sure the answer is simple: when a botnet is up, it takes commands instead of issuing information back to the command and control. The idea behind a botnet is more frequently to control millions of random desktops from one central point. If botnets phone home with a new wallet or information, you run the risk of being traced more easily, being detected more easily and also DDOSing yourself if your botnet gets out of hand. That's my suspicion anyway. I'm sure some do do this, they probably just can't get very large.

    --
    My work here is dung.
  6. Test and do the math by RayHahn · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Get a "Kill-O-Watt" for about $20. Test a PC at idle. Then load up the bitcoin processes, and test again. You will indeed find that the PC is drawing considerably more power under load than at idle. Multiply the increase in wattage by the number of hours in a month, then by the number of PCs you're talking about, and then divide by 1000 to get the increase in kilowatt hours. Multiply that by your cost of power per KWh.

    Then go read how increasingly impossible it's becoming to mine coins, and how you'll have a very difficult time getting one.

    Then don't do it.

  7. you're already not green by anyaristow · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You leave 18K systems on 24/7 so you can do a once-per-week virus scan and a twice per week backup? Really?

  8. Green schmene by sarysa · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Anyone else notice that this question is being asked during a massive bubble period, and what is necessary to prop up a bubble is public awareness? Just like my post just now is shamefully unrelated to its parent, might the true purpose of this Ask Slashdot be to bring in a few more suckers before it crashes down to 15 or 20?

    I will admit my biases against Bitcoin and my post history speaks to this, but this is a tactic also used to prop up stocks and precious metals. So yeah, I'm calling out TFS.

    --
    Charisma is the measure of someone's ability to lie with a straight face.
    1. Re:Green schmene by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I'd like to add to this something I've seen others point out before.

      Bitcoin's Blockchain grows exponentially larger with time.

      In 2 years it went from about 200mb to 6gb.

      I'll rough-graph this exponential growth to show you clearly what it means At around 10 years you're talking about a 100gb file sitting on the drives of every bitcoin user. At 20 years that 100gb file is now over 4tb. In 30 years that's 9tb. And so on, you can read a graph.

      The blockchain is a fundamental aspect of the bitcoin, you can't just start truncating it. It will grow like this forever. Bitcoin will eventually grow so large that it is impractical for even the most diehard of virtual currency enthusiast. The only way to keep it functional is to assume massive advances in technology or that everyone is going to move to cloud based bitcoin banking, letting a third party company do all the processing and blockchain storage. At that point bitcoin would be as equally regulated as any other currency rendering the entire point of bitcoin useless.

      The reality here is that bitcoin is an intentionally manufactured bubble. Anyone that understands math and has a reasonable grasp of how large a terabyte actually is can easily see this if they look past the near blinding glamour that the bitcoin proponents toss out to distract you from the truth.

      Another point to consider is that bitcoin is not a stable currency. It swings up and down very wildly in value. This is fine if you treat it like an investment akin to trading the Forex markets, but it's pretty terrible not knowing from day to day how many bitcoins it takes to fill your gas tank. If you do get involved with bitcoin be prepared to exit at any time or you risk losing everything. Enron was also a fantastic investment for early adopters.

    2. Re:Green schmene by shaitand · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You can buy goods and services with Bitcoin. It IS real money. Since it is built on more sound principles than fiat some of us take it in preference to fiat. The only thing hindering Bitcoin now is critical mass and adoption is growing.

      It is no different than the open source vs commercial or firefox vs IE issue. Being an entrenched monopoly makes overtaking you a slower process but it doesn't make you invincible vs a superior solution in the end.

    3. Re:Green schmene by shaitand · · Score: 4, Interesting

      "Not really sure how that's going to work with the inherent instability of Bitcoin."

      I don't see there as being any inherent instability in Bitcoin. Unless you consider the instability that comes from low volume as inherent instability. A stock with Bitcoins volume and media appeal has price instability as well. But we can agree to disagree here.

      But I'll tell you a story. There is an entity billing one of my credit cards monthly for $20. They refuse to stop. I can dispute the charges but only back 90 days. I did this once and had a new card with a new number issued. I just discovered that the charges are still being applied. According to my bank because it is recurring billing it doesn't matter how many times I dispute or change the card number they will continue to pay it. My only remaining option is to put a total block on my account with them, pay off any remaining balance, and then close the account.

      As it happens I never entered an agreement. But whether or not I did so doesn't matter. At least, it is none of my banks business. Their primary reason for existence is to make sure NOBODY gets a single penny of my balance without my explicit authorization. If there was an agreement the company in question would be free to try to establish that in a civil suit. So why does my bank refuse to stop giving away my money? They have a backend deal with the merchants and are deliberately breaking faith to maintain their interests over those of account holders (it is a secured card, I don't use unsecured credit so I am borrowing my own money not theirs).

      Bitcoin prevents this scenario from even being possible. It is left to me to authorized every pay out. Nobody can pull funds, I have to push them. At the end of the day, my right to decide a vendor doesn't deserve my money is left to my discretion not the banks. If I want to rob peter to pay Paul, this is my choice.

  9. You're doing it wrong. by hawks5999 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If this is your "Go Green" initiative, you either don't understand Bitcoin mining or "Go Green" means something different than most would assume.