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For the First Time, a US City Has Banned Cryptocurrency Mining (businessinsider.com)

CaptainDork writes: The city of Plattsburgh, New York is imposing an 18-month moratorium on commercial cryptocurrency mining. The official reasoning for the moratorium is to "protect and enhance the City's natural, historic, cultural and electrical resources." Plattsburgh residents have seen skyrocketing electrical bills -- as much as $100 to $200 increases -- as a result of commercial cryptomining operations that mine for cryptocurrencies like bitcoin, according to Plattsburgh Mayor Colin Read, who spoke with Motherboard. The city is taking action to protect its citizens from those rising electrical bills that the city of Plattsburgh says is caused by cryptomining operations.

It turns out that commercial cryptocurrency mining operations used up so much electricity that the city of Plattsburgh exceeded its allotted monthly budget of electricity. One single cryptocurrency mining operation called Coinmint used up around 10% of the city's allotted power supply alone in January and February, according to Motherboard. When its electrical budget was exceeded in January, the city had to buy electricity from the open market at a higher cost, which was distributed among its residents.

124 of 198 comments (clear)

  1. Good by nwaack · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's about damn time we start putting an end to this idiocy.

    1. Re:Good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It's about damn time we start putting an end to this idiocy.

      You think one small town of less than 20k will make any difference at all? The only reason they're doing this is they're so small they don't even generate their own power. This is utterly meaningless to the crypto market as a whole.

    2. Re:Good by cayenne8 · · Score: 1

      ...used up so much electricity that the city of Plattsburgh exceeded its allotted monthly budget of electricity.

      Ok, this is a new one on me.

      Since when does a city have an "allotment" of electricity per month??

      I've never heard of such a thing. I never thought electricity was in any form or fashioned rationed out by the power company?

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    3. Re:Good by Vektuz · · Score: 2

      The electricity company cannot produce infinite electricity at a whim. They have a certain amount of generation capacity, and when demand increases, they can build additional plants - but they are expensive to run and take a long time to build.

      So at any given time there is a fixed amount of peak electricity available (you can't really store it) and the cities and companies basically run on estimates on how much is in use / will be needed, thats the allotment.

      If a city were to suddenly draw 10x as much power, this is a problem, as it can stress the grid. It can be overcome by building additional production facilities, but that takes years.

    4. Re:Good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes, it is a symptom of a larger disease, which is free market capitalism

      If the US didn't learn from the Great Depression that a regulated economy is necessary to avoid misapplication of resources and improper allocation of financial responsibility, then we are all fucked (globally)

    5. Re:Good by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      The "allotment" is the amount at the set price. Above that you pay a higher rate. There is nothing uncommon about the practice. Free market at work.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    6. Re: Good by peragrin · · Score: 2

      The city probably buys in bulk based on historical forecasts and usages. It then is responsible for distribution in city limits.

      Lots of small towns and cities run their own electric company often at rates lower than normal market will do in that region.

      They then do the maintence on the local grid too.

      The business moved in due to the cheap electrical lied about it's usage(which probably required a waiver from the town) and proceeded to spend.

      Expect to see similar stories as Bitcoin Drops in price.

      --
      i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
    7. Re:Good by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      So you think the power company can create arbitrary amounts of electricity on a whim? Rather than having a maximum generation capacity before they would have to source power from other providers?

      You've never heard of overage charges in which you pay extra when you use more than a pre-agreed limit on something? DO you not know what the word "budget" means maybe?

      I can't fathom how someone could live in the modern world and never have come across these concepts.

      My water bill, my cell phone bill, my electricity bill, and my colocation network bill, sending a package with fedex all use similar structures.

    8. Re: Good by cayenne8 · · Score: 1

      The city probably buys in bulk based on historical forecasts and usages. It then is responsible for distribution in city limits.

      What do you mean the "city buys"?

      Everywhere I've ever lived, how much electricity I use is directly between myself and the power company.

      The power company bills me directly for how much energy I use.

      Are you telling me some cities buy electricity and sell it to the citizens as a middleman?

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    9. Re:Good by cayenne8 · · Score: 1

      So you think the power company can create arbitrary amounts of electricity on a whim?

      No, but it sounded like the city was the one buying or being allocated power from the electric company rather than the actual customer.

      I've never heard of anywhere where the power company sells to the city and apparently resells to the customer based on what the city had bought or was allocated, etc.

      I've always gotten a bill directly from the power company, not the city.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    10. Re:Good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      They didn't ban residential users, they banned companies from coming into their town and setting up a mining operation. The town had previously subsidized power for industrial users, in order to try to attract companies that would create jobs. The bit coin miners will just no longer be getting that subsidy, because they don't create jobs, and use up all the power forcing the town to buy it off the open market and raising the price for everyone.

      two bitcoin mining operations were using 10% of the towns cheap power and increased everyone's bill by about $10 for jan and feb.

    11. Re:Good by bv728 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Since nobody seems to be putting the actual facts as a response:

      As part of an agreement with the power company, the city gave them the right to build a large hydroelectric dam on city property in exchange for access to an allotment of power at an extremely cheap rate. When they exceed that allotment, the city has to buy off power exchange, which is significantly more, accounting for covering storage, exchange, and transmission costs on the larger network.

      The city very rarely (or never) exceeded that allotment before, and now is. Because of how the contracts are structured, that additional cost is passed on to all consumers on their bill - everyone pays based on time-windowed averaged costs of power over the month, not the exact real cost at the moment of consumption (this is pretty normal due to storage and variable rates per time block otherwise making bills goofy complicated).

      The result is they voted in an 18-month stop on NEW cryptomining operations (existing ones can continue) with a plan to submit to the appropriate regulatory bodies a modification to electrical pricing that would allow them to place the additional costs from the Power Exchange on high power utilization businesses, rather than across all users. The cryptomining operations mostly seem okay with this, as the proposal still sees them get a decent chunk of cheap power.

    12. Re:Good by mysidia · · Score: 1

      and when demand increases, they can build additional plants - but they are expensive to run and take a long time to build.

      No.... they are expensive to build And take a long time to get the government approval to build.

      And building additional plants/capacity is difficult to justify, because overbuilding is an inherent necessity, and they can't turn that around to profit until demand for electricity gradually increases.....

      So anyways: This is an area where Bitcoin could help by generating demand early, so the extra capacity can be built and not sit dormant waiting before people need the electricity ----- then as demand from the population ramps up, the cost of electricity increases until the cost is high enough the Bitcoin miners can't profit, so they close up shop move on to the next area where electrical infrastructure is being underutilized.

    13. Re:Good by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Their electricity originates from a hydroelectric plant (ie, a dam), and that is parceled out to various municipalities. Ie, the region's power generation infrastructure that was paid for by tax dollars is being used by regional tax payers. Excess power can be sold on the open market, but the local cities get first dibs.

    14. Re: Good by cayenne8 · · Score: 1

      You bet. Hagerstown, MD buys electricity on the open market delivered via Potomac Edison (large regional carrier) and then is distributed on city owned wires and poles. Your bills say MELP (Municipal Electric Light Plant) on them, not PE. They used to have their own coal and oil fired generating station but it stopped generating in the 1980's and was finally razed last year.

      Wow..that is weird.

      I have never in my many years of living in different cities ever heard of, or encountered such a set up with the city acting as middleman between power company and citizens.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    15. Re:Good by Darinbob · · Score: 2

      They should charge overage charges to the currency miners and charge them at a higher rate. And they have every right to do so. They should even have a case of doing this retroactively if the mining companies lied about their expected rate of electricty use. They would be in their rights also to give only a certain allotment to the mining companies and pulling the plug when that is exceeded.

      The super cheap price for industrial user (cheaper than residential rates!) was intended to bring in jobs. That's a naive plan that too many cities fall for, sweetheart deals to attract a larger tax base, which rarely works out. That's because there's more automation now, fewer jobs arrive to offset the industry discounts. City councils are often thinking about the good old days when a new factory would need lots of workers all eager to go out and buy houses and pay sales tax; and local citizens are all thinking that a new industry will need lots of local unskilled workers and thus save their economy. Now these cryptominers show and and show the flaws in this thinking as this industry ends up being a net drain on the city.

    16. Re:Good by gmack · · Score: 1

      They scan still have capitalism, just drive the miners a short distance over the Quebec border where the power is cheaper anyways.

    17. Re:Good by supremebob · · Score: 1

      Yeah... we had people mining World Of Warcraft gold and Second Life Linden Dollars for profit long before Bitcoin and it's clones arrived. If you give people an easy way to make money with their computer in their spare time, people will try it no matter how pathetic the daily returns are.

    18. Re: Good by rogoshen1 · · Score: 1

      and yet had the FDIC existed back then, the fallout would have been much less severe.

      Not all regulation is bad, not everything a government does is bad.

      Those damn libertarians always pushing to throw the baby out with the bathwater.

    19. Re:Good by Obfuscant · · Score: 1

      They should charge overage charges to the currency miners and charge them at a higher rate.

      Why should there be a concept of "overage" on electricity? If you buy a 60A service from the electric company, why shouldn't you be allowed to draw 60A 24/7/365? Isn't it false advertising to put on artificial limits? (This is a perfect analogy for Internet use, btw.)

      But of course, they should have a tiered rate structure with higher rates for higher tiers, IF the costs are actually higher as the quantity goes up. Do you feel the same way about Internet usage?

      They should even have a case of doing this retroactively if the mining companies lied about their expected rate of electricty use.

      Absolutely NOT. The customers were sold a service, the use was measured, and they paid the rates that were in effect at that time. There should be no retroactive modification of rates. And how is it lying when you order a 200A service from the electric company and then use 200A for a large amount of the time? You don't have to estimate how much electricity you're going to use next month, you use it and then get charged. That's why they have METERS, you know.

      Now these cryptominers show and and show the flaws in this thinking as this industry

      And do we have any information that shows that any of the cryptominers tried to get a economic development designation to get a lower tax rate, or did they just start renting an empty office (or use their own garage) to mine in? I know, it's a useful excuse to rant about municipal tax breaks that do bring companies into an area (like Target distribution centers) that do bring jobs, but cryptomining isn't an industry in that sense. It can be run from your garage or a standard office building and employs very few people. The days of manual calculations of bitchains and bitcoins is long over, it is ALL automated.

    20. Re:Good by Obfuscant · · Score: 1

      If you exceed the high-water limit, then you will pay twice to three times as much

      That's called a tiered rate structure, and it is standard practice in the utility business. At least it has been standard practice at every electric and water company I've been a customer of. Each electric bill lists so many kWH at so much per, then so many kWH at a bit more, etc. It's not a new concept. Except for these city idiots who thought charging everyone more when a few people used a lot was a good idea.

    21. Re:Good by vtcodger · · Score: 1

      FWIW, here's a link to the story in Plattsburgh's local newspaper which may provide a clearer explanation of the problem. http://www.pressrepublican.com... And yes, late December and early January did feature some unusually low temperatures -- around -17F(-27C) several nights presumably causing folks to run more electric heaters than usual more of the time.

      --
      You can't see ANYTHING from a car, You've got to get out of the goddamned contraption and walk...Edward Abbey
    22. Re: Good by BlueStrat · · Score: 1

      I have never in my many years of living in different cities ever heard of, or encountered such a set up with the city acting as middleman between power company and citizens.

      It's a way for the city to make profit on the margin between what the city pays and what they charge residents. It's a stealth tax.

      This city saw it's profits being affected, and possibly eventually threatening to disrupt their entire setup as unnecessary percentage-taking middleman between electrical utilities and customers.

      I wonder how they'll deal with the installation of electric vehicle charging stations coming in the very near future. Hell, I wonder how the US electrical grid as a whole is hoing to deal with the additional energy demand equivalent to the energy consumed as fossil-fuel powering current vehicles. That's a hell of a lot of energy. US generation capacity is already stretched to serve current demand with little to no reserve capacity.

      Hopefully it will spur a resurgence in nuclear power generation and reworking of nuclear regulatory policies to something approaching the universe in which relatively-sane national nuclear regulatory policy resides.

      Strat

      --
      Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
    23. Re:Good by Obfuscant · · Score: 3, Informative

      Yes, it is a symptom of a larger disease, which is free market capitalism

      Nonsense. It is a symptom of government control and the controllers being inept. This is a city utility where the overly-egalitarian management thought that charging everyone more when high-users pushed the costs up was a good idea.

      Even a moment's thought would have shown why that is a bad idea. It shouldn't take Gramma getting a $400 electric bill to pay for a cryptominer's electricity to wake people up.

      You might have missed -- this wasn't a free market operation to start with. The city negotiated an artificial limit on supply and a poor rate structure for reselling that supply. The fact that they have to beg the regulatory agencies for the ability to change their rate structure might also be a hint that free-market economics aren't relevant here.

    24. Re:Good by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Because there may not be that much electricity. Also such a high use puts greater demands on the infrastructure, and so it is more expensive to supply the service. I meant a tiered rate, which is how overage charges are sometimes done, though sometimes tiered rates are by time of day. Especially in the case of this city when the low cost electricity shared with residential users is a fixed amount, you do not want one customer taking most of it.

      Consider if this was the water service. If an industry moves in, digs a well, then sucks the water table dry, it has a severe effect on the neighbors. Or if they just turned on the tap and forgot about it. These cryptominers did have a noticeable effect on the electricity rates of all users, not just themselves. Granted, a lot of that was naivete on the part of the city.

      Sure, it should apply to internet. The big snag that caused all the early complaints was with early high use users of cable internet who shared their wires with their neighbors. They started whining loudly about how service was declining over time as more of their neighbors started using the internet. It's not an infinite service, there isn't infinite bandwidth. Extra demand can increase supply, but not instantly. Again, naivete on the part of ISPs for offering "unlimited" plans.

      In this case, it wasn't a straight up tax break, but a steep discount on electricity (2c per KWh I think, compared to national average of 10c). And it was an industry and the city knew it existed, this wasn't a case of people secretly mining from their bedrooms.

    25. Re:Good by Obfuscant · · Score: 1

      Because there may not be that much electricity.

      What is this a response to? Because what? It's obvious there was enough electricity -- they were buying it and reselling it and charging everyone higher rates. There is nothing in that story about anyone running out of electricity. There was "that much" because they sold "that much" and the customers used "that much".

      I meant a tiered rate,

      Fine, but you said "overage charges", which is a fee applied when you go over a set limit. Different thing altogether.

      Consider if this was the water service.

      I already have, as I used water service as an example of a city utility making flushing a toilet at certain times illegal.

      If an industry moves in, digs a well,

      If there is municipal water service, digging wells is prohibited.

      These cryptominers did have a noticeable effect on the electricity rates of all users, not just themselves.

      They shouldn't have, and it should not have resulted in a ban on specific uses of electricity. Uses, I will point out again, that require intrusive measures to determine. (I.e., you can't stand outside a building and say "I can prove they are crytomining inside.") This is an example of poor management of a city utility which didn't result in a change to the rate structure but the creation of a law specifying what you can and cannot use electricity to do. A legal solution to an issue created by stupid management. It is telling you that you can use all the electricity you want, unless you want to use it for this purpose. Just like telling people they can use all the water they want as long as they don't use it to flush their toilet.

      Sure, it should apply to internet.

      Roger.

      In this case, it wasn't a straight up tax break, but a steep discount on electricity (2c per KWh I think, compared to national average of 10c).

      It was not a tax break because taxes weren't involved. It was a low rate for electricity for everyone, not just the evil industries. This is pretty clear from the fact that the issue is rising electric bills for residential users, too. If there were different rate structures involved, the rates for one kind of use would be independent of others.

    26. Re:Good by Applehu+Akbar · · Score: 1

      It's about damn time we start putting an end to this idiocy.

      Who knew that cryptocurrency mining would turn out to be tougher on the environment than gold mining?

    27. Re:Good by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      The power company's contract is with the city, not the individual consumers

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    28. Re: Good by TheRealMindChild · · Score: 1

      Try not living under a rock. It is also done with water too.

      --

      "When life gives you lemons, don't make lemonade. Make life take the lemons back!" -- Cave Johnson
    29. Re:Good by jd · · Score: 1

      To combat global warming, we need demand reduced. It's no good producing Starship Enterprise levels of power if everyone is dead.

      --
      It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
    30. Re:Good by psmoot · · Score: 1

      FWIW, PG&E, my power company, charges rates tiered by usage (e.g. the first N kW-Hours are cheaper than the second, third, and fourth N). You can also sign up for a time-of-day plan, which is cheaper most of the time, more expensive from around 2-8 PM. Finally, there's a program which gets you a bit of a discount all the time in exchange for exorbitantly expensive electricity on high demand days (basically scorching hot summer afternoons).

      We used to be on the last plan. My wive loved the discount until we hit a heat wave. Then it sunk in that running the AC or anything else just got really expensive.

    31. Re:Good by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      No.... they are expensive to build And take a long time to get the government approval to build.

      No, they simply take a long time to build. Power stations are big. Big things take a long time to build. You can't just go to Harbour Freight and buy a couple of Siemens 500MW Gas turbines. Even after approval power plants take years to build.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    32. Re:Good by Sigma+7 · · Score: 1

      Now some city is dictating what you can use your electricity for that you purchased in your own home and banning some computation.

      Actually, it's the city that purchased the electricity, and passes the lowered rates onto the people and industries in the city. Because of the nature of the reduced rates, it's perfectly acceptable for the city to provide requirements for people or industries to likewise be billed at the reduced rate, whether it is to provide jobs for the community or making a custom arrangement so that it doesn't disrupt others.

      The libertarian argument should be reserved for those who purchase electricity directly from the power companies, rather than those who constantly sink a discounted rate from the city grid.

    33. Re:Good by Obfuscant · · Score: 1

      Because of the nature of the reduced rates, it's perfectly acceptable for the city to provide requirements for people or industries to likewise be billed at the reduced rate, whether it is to provide jobs for the community or making a custom arrangement so that it doesn't disrupt others.

      No, it is not acceptable. The city is operating a utility -- a government created and controlled monopoly -- and should not be putting requirements like "job creation" on the ability to buy power. They CAN have a rate structure to give a break to companies that will be creating a lot of jobs, but they didn't do that. They chose to make certain uses of electricity illegal. That's also not acceptable.

      rather than those who constantly sink a discounted rate from the city grid.

      Since the city operates the only grid available, it needs to do so without arbitrary or capricious limits on what the power you buy can be used to do.

      I'm fascinated by the dichotomy that appears to be occurring here. The claim that the "cable company" is a "government-granted monopoly" (which is not true) is used to argue for all kinds of regulation on what they can and cannot do. Here we have a true government-granted monopoly and it can do whatever it wants, from social engineering to outright criminalizing certain actions.

    34. Re: Good by rlk · · Score: 1

      Municipal power companies aren't that uncommon. They often charge lower rates and provide better service; after an early snowstorm in October 2011 in Massachusetts, the municipal utilities had their towns back in operation a lot faster than the private ones.

    35. Re: Good by aliquis · · Score: 1

      LOL.

      The typical scenario is that the central planned allocation is wrong.
      The free market not so much / at all.

      Since there's demand for these currencies people provide them.

    36. Re:Good by redlemming · · Score: 1

      If the US didn't learn from the Great Depression that a regulated economy is necessary to avoid misapplication of resources and improper allocation of financial responsibility, then we are all fucked (globally)

      It's pretty clearly established that bad government regulation caused the Great Depression - and kept it going for far longer than needed. The economics literature is full of studies - and there are a number of books out there as well.

      For example, federal mis-handling of the money supply was a primary contributor. Also, the majority of the bank failures were caused by regulations that limited the investments the "county" banks could make, making them very vulnerable to failure.

      Hoover and especially FDR made matters worse with numerous bad decisions - the worst of which was implementing and keeping the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act (which in and of itself would have been an economic disaster even in the absence of the other bad policies). At times in the "Roaring 20's" the US had the lowest unemployment in the developed nations - but after 8 years of FDR the US wasn't even in the top 10. Correction of the process started when many of FDR's policies had to be suspended due to WW2 - and the Great Depression was finally ended when those policies were thrown out entirely after the war.

      The literature is full of other examples. You might start with the book "New Deal or Raw Deal" by Folsom, or FDR's Folly by Powell. "Out of Work" by Vedder and Gallaway is also informative.

      Yes, regulation is needed - Adam Smith made that point clear in 1776, and there is lots of history since then to confirm the point, but bad regulation is not desirable. It is very difficult for government officials to know what regulations are appropriate, and they often get it wrong (as evidenced by the failures of Keynesian policy over the years since WW2).

      Despite myths to the contrary, the US industrial system during WW2 was very much a capitalist system with only some government regulation - it was set up by William S. Knudsen, who resigned from his position as CEO of General Motors out of patriotism to take on the task for one dollar a year. Nobody in the government knew how to run industrial production - but Knudsen did, and he set things up to balance the capabilities of industry with the needs of the war effort (taking into account both what large businesses could do, and how smaller businesses could help). It was not something a government bureaucrat could have achieved - it took a capitalist with a deep understanding of capitalism and manufacturing (Knudsen had come up through the ranks, starting as a machinist), balanced with strong patriotism, to make things work.

    37. Re:Good by justin3928 · · Score: 1

      Why should there be a concept of "overage" on electricity? If you buy a 60A service from the electric company, why shouldn't you be allowed to draw 60A 24/7/365? Isn't it false advertising to put on artificial limits? (This is a perfect analogy for Internet use, btw.)

      But of course, they should have a tiered rate structure with higher rates for higher tiers, IF the costs are actually higher as the quantity goes up. Do you feel the same way about Internet usage?

      Do you expect your electrical bill to be fixed every month? Electricity is not changed by capacity. The resource being sold is electrical power.

      "overage" is merely usage tiers: X $/kwh for power up to R1. Y $/kwh for power above R1.

      For (consumer) internet, the resource being sold is bandwidth, regardless of volume.

    38. Re:Good by MemeRot · · Score: 1

      Not true.... we could build some terraform scale powered CO2 scrubbers. Its leaving greenhouse gases in the atmosphere thats a problem, not demand for electricity

    39. Re:Good by eric_harris_76 · · Score: 1

      Yes, it is a symptom of a larger disease, which is free market capitalism

      Well, that's the stupidest thing I've seen today. On the Internet. On Slashdot. (The competition is pretty fierce if FB and G+ are included.)

      A government-regulated public utility business (or is it government-owned?) sells more product than it expected to, due to a new category of customer, and charges the customers who didn't buy that unexpected excess product more.

      Hanging that one on capitalism -- free market capitalism, no less -- is quite remarkable.

      It's like blaming obesity on fasting, or blaming parking tickets for car.crashes.

      Your prize: a dictionary of economic terms.

      --
      There's no time like the present. Well, the past used to be.
    40. Re:Good by catprog · · Score: 1

      My understanding was it was a very good rate for a limited amount. The miners then took all the cheap stuff.

      --
      My Transformation Website
      Kindle Books http://www.catprog.org/rev
      Interactive CYOA http://www.catprog.org/st
    41. Re:Good by Obfuscant · · Score: 1

      Do you expect your electrical bill to be fixed every month?

      Where did you get that ridiculous idea? I said nothing even close to that. I expect the rates to be fixed and not as flexible as this city is making them. That means the bill will vary. Where did I say otherwise?

      Electricity is not changed by capacity.

      Huh? Where did I say THAT? How would it change?

      "overage" is merely usage tiers:

      No, "overage" means a charge if you exceed a certain amount. Tiered pricing, which I've already talked about, is not the same thing.

      For (consumer) internet, the resource being sold is bandwidth, regardless of volume.

      It is not regardless of volume. When people make too much use of their bandwidth, they're sometimes getting overage charges, or sometimes getting capped. That's why this is a perfect analogy for Internet. (And I will also point out, there are many Internet plans that are volume with no mention of bandwidth.)

      If you buy a 60A service, there should be no point where an overage charge kicks in. You should be able to draw 60A 24/7/365 and not be capped or find a new charge on your bill for being over. Just like many, if not most, people here argue that if you buy "up to 100Mbps Internet" you should not find yourself capped or with an extra fee because you went over some limit.

      As a further analogy, why is the city electric company not able to provide the service it sells? If they sell 1000 60A services, then they should be able to provide 60kA 24/7, or for a 30 day month, 43MWH. (The true number for this city is certainly much higher, but this is an example.) For Internet, this would be analogous to selling 1000 100Mbps lines and therefore should be able to handle 100Gbps and a total of 30Tb for a month to their customers. That's what people say when the issue is Internet, why isn't anyone pointing this out for electricity?

    42. Re:Good by Obfuscant · · Score: 1

      My understanding was it was a very good rate for a limited amount.

      Which makes "free market" irrelevant here. The actual amount wasn't limited, it was an artificial limit imposed by a city contract.

      The miners then took all the cheap stuff.

      The miners bought what was being sold at the rate the city charged for it. Just like Gramma bought what was being sold at the rate the city charged for it. Are the miners to blame for the city being inept and creating an artificial scarcity?

    43. Re:Good by Xenx · · Score: 1

      Except, power production is in fact limited. Only so much power is produced from a particular source at a particular rate. Then, there is the infrastructure to handle the power load and so on. Any finite resource will invariably be worth more, the less available it becomes. Thus, it's perfectly logical that cost would increase when the additional loads of miners are taken into account. The utility starts having to pay more per kWh to meet the demand. That additional cost per kWh gets passed down to the customers. Each customer is still only charged for their usage, but the base rate is now higher.

  2. How to enforce the ban by aglider · · Score: 2

    Is the most interesting part!

    --
    Sent as ripples into the electromagnetic field. No single photon has been harmed in the process.
    1. Re:How to enforce the ban by Rosco+P.+Coltrane · · Score: 2

      Cutting the power?

      --
      "A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
    2. Re:How to enforce the ban by Pinky's+Brain · · Score: 1

      Cripple them with fines if discovered, jail sentences if possible.

      Balance risk/reward towards the risk enough and even low chances of discovery don't matter.

    3. Re:How to enforce the ban by Oswald+McWeany · · Score: 2

      Is the most interesting part!

      Having a neckbeard results in police having probable cause to search your property for bitcoin mining rigs. The thing is, it's all a scam, they're just trying to steal their Cheetos.

      --
      "That's the way to do it" - Punch
    4. Re:How to enforce the ban by the_skywise · · Score: 1

      The TRUTH behind the civil forfeiture laws. It wasn't for money or cars... The PoPo wanted THE CHEETOS!

    5. Re:How to enforce the ban by silas_moeckel · · Score: 2

      Commercial as in a datacenter full of rigs not some guy at home.

      --
      No sir I dont like it.
    6. Re:How to enforce the ban by Train0987 · · Score: 2

      It is trivial to catch you. The amount of electricity you use is readily available by the power company and when one address consumes 10% of the entire town's allotment you'll stand out like a sore thumb.

      Law enforcement has been using electricity use to find pot growing operations for decades.

    7. Re:How to enforce the ban by will_die · · Score: 4, Funny

      No officer I am not running a bunch of computers, I'm growing weed.

    8. Re:How to enforce the ban by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Anecdote: I knew a guy who ran a bunch of servers in British Columbia who regularly got swept up in crackdowns for growhouses. As the number of states with legalized marijuana industries increases, what makes you think it won't work in reverse?

      2008: lie to the police and say you don't grow weed, you run multiple home servers
      2018: lie to the police and say you don't run multiple home servers, you grow weed

    9. Re:How to enforce the ban by mysidia · · Score: 1

      You'll probably have provided an explanation for that when you got the POCO to upgrade you to 3-Phase 1000 AMP or more electrical services,
      because the typical residential 100-Amp panel doesn't provide a lot of capacity for doing large-scale mining.

      You can provide a reason for your electrical usage "Running BOINC clients" and high-volume GPU-based computation for personal research in mathematics, cryptography, and AI machine learning development.

      The electrical consumption cannot be used to establish that you are running a commercial mining operation.

    10. Re:How to enforce the ban by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      You're right. How are they going to find an activity highly correlated with (and outlawed because of) consuming tons of electricity. Why, you would need to track how much electricity every building in town uses.

      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
    11. Re:How to enforce the ban by Obfuscant · · Score: 1

      Easy to catch you. It's called your electric meter. How do you think they catch the in-house pot farms?

      The electric meter cannot catch you running a cryptomining operation. It can only tell the electric company that you are using a certain amount of electricity. They caught pot growers because a higher rate of electric use was used as justification for a search warrant, the execution of which is when they caught the people growing weed.

      Isn't it wonderful, we now have a city where they can see a high electric usage and get a search warrant to look for cryptomining operations? What will be next on the prohibited uses for electricity? You're running a foundry or a true pot producing operation (with clay and a couple of kilns eating the electrons) -- that's now illegal because it uses electricity in a way we don't approve.

      Either the townie crypto police or the DEA is going to come knocking based on the abnormal KWH used.

      In both cases it will be the city police or county sheriff. Nobody gets credit for stopping the evil drug mongers if DEA does the raid, and politicians are all about getting credit. "Re-elect Bob for Sheriff, he's tough on drugs..."

    12. Re:How to enforce the ban by Obfuscant · · Score: 1

      Why, you would need to track how much electricity every building in town uses.

      It's a city-run electric company. They can track how much electricity EVERY customer uses. They can even correlate it with the time of day (if they use smart meters) and service level (60A, 100A, etc). If you use 100% during daylight but not at night, you're probably not cryptomining. If you use 100% at night but not during the day, you're probably a grow op. If you use 100% all the time, here's your search warrant, we're looking for a lot of computers.

    13. Re:How to enforce the ban by jd · · Score: 1

      Voltage regulator. The circuit breakers that exist in the power grid already suffice. Just set the point to pre-spike levels for each district. If the district exceeds that, it gets cut out of the grid.

      --
      It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
    14. Re:How to enforce the ban by Enigma2175 · · Score: 1

      Are you hearing a "whooshing" sound right now?

      --

      Enigma

    15. Re:How to enforce the ban by Obfuscant · · Score: 1

      No, you are hearing a reemphasis of the point that a city run utility is different than a privately run one, if in nothing more than this ability to track users and act upon it. I do not know if the OP was being sarcastic, but my comment supports that if it was.

    16. Re:How to enforce the ban by thegarbz · · Score: 1

      Is the most interesting part!

      Same way you refuse any other industrial power purchasing contract: don't sign.

  3. Difficulty will rise so high by xack · · Score: 2

    That only people with free or stolen electricty will be able to compete. We already see it with malware miners stealing peoples resources. I expect most electric companies will have mining restrictions in a few years, giving rise to “electricity neutrality” debates.

  4. wrong problem by supernova87a · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The city doesn't need to ban currency mining. They need to fix their electricity tariff (rates).

    If currency miners find that it's economical to spend electricity like this, it means that the city is not charging commercial / residential customers the appropriate amounts when they exceed reasonable usage levels. They need to fix that. It probably means that a bunch of other things about their electricity and water and government services are priced incorrectly / being abused as well.

    What can you do? All these local/town governments were set up with rules dating from 50 years ago, and they've never changed or adapted since.

    1. Re:wrong problem by Pinky's+Brain · · Score: 1

      Not all electricity consumption is equal. A citizen pays a lot more taxes per Wh consumed than a cryptominer. A factory employs people and thus brings in lots of taxes too per Wh consumed.

      Cryptomining has externalities hard to capture in non discriminatory rates. Any discriminatory rate which accurately captured them would make cryptomining there unsustainable any way, so might as well ban it.

    2. Re:wrong problem by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 1

      All these local/town governments were set up with rules dating from 50 years ago, and they've never changed or adapted since.

      They don't want to change or adapt . . . it's right there in TFS:

      The official reasoning for the moratorium is to "protect and enhance the City's natural, historic, cultural and electrical resources."

      . . . "in the purity of their precious bodily fluids!"

      What will they do when that whippersnapper Elon Musk comes to town, with his newfangled cars that will sap the City's natural, historic, cultural and electrical resources . . . ?

      --
      Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
    3. Re:wrong problem by Vektuz · · Score: 4, Interesting

      This is sort of a half-fix but what would ultimately mean is that when a city installs a lot of solar/other stuff (for the benefit of their citizens to lower pollution/electricity costs/etc) and thus have excess cheap power to sell back to the grid or use, bitcoin miners would move in and use up all excess while its cheap, leading to the permanent residents of a town getting no cost benefit to doing it. They might even have to fire up the coal plants again to meet demand.

      I can totally understand permanent residents of a city working with the council to basically say nope to that. They live there. Its their choice, thats how city governance works.

      Otherwise what ends up happening is that the miners move in and starts increasing demand whenever the cost is under a certain amount, which means the cost has a strict floor at the price of bitcoin generation. It can never ever be cheaper than that, because the moment its cheaper than that, miners absorb all the excess, causing the cost of electricity to be tied to the price of bitcoin, something you probably don't want for your city if you live there, especially if you've been investing in infrastructure to reduce energy prices / clean pollution.

      It gets worse, too. You might decide 'fine, let the market decide', so you are forced to build more electricity-producing plants to meet this rising demand and keep pushing costs down or face brownouts / blackouts in residential. Its really, really really expensive to build electric generation plants and the infrastructure to support them, and it takes a really long time, and they are expensive to maintain running, even if you 'turn them off'. But the miners move out whenever there's some other better opportunity elsewhere, leaving you with all this infrastructure your permanent residents payed for and are being taxed on...

    4. Re:wrong problem by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

      It's the kind of city that would also ban solar panels for the same reasons.

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    5. Re:wrong problem by edtice1559 · · Score: 1

      Which if you look at the actual moratorium, that's what they're doing. They just need time to get it in place. Hence the 18 month hold on new crypto-currency mining.

    6. Re:wrong problem by mysidia · · Score: 1

      How about, things like you know:

      Premium Weighting = (Kilowatt Hours used) Divided by (10 * Number of monthly Worker-Hours + Customer/Guest-Visit-Hours employed inside the facility)

      Then you have an "allowance" based on how much local economic activity is generated.

      Base Price = Standard discounted electric price, e.g. $0.10 / kWh

          Then for the monthly bill...

      Price per Kilowatt hour consumed = (Base Price) + max(0, (G-Factor) x (Premium Weighting) x (Base Price) )

      For example: 50000 kilowatt hours used by 5000 man-hours * 10 = Gives a weighting of 1.00, but 10x as many kWh gives a weighting of 10.0

      Price per KwH = $0.10 + (G-Factor) X 1 * 0.10

      The G-factor being set somewhere between 0.01 and 10.00 based on the month's "Overdemand" level for electricity
      and some index of usage tiers; the greater the excessive overall demand by all users the higher each electric customer's indexed G-Factor will be be.

    7. Re:wrong problem by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      Did you even read the fucking summary??

      The city doesn't need to ban currency mining. They need to fix their electricity tariff (rates).

      They banned mining for 18 months until they finish finalized new rates

      It probably means that a bunch of other things about their electricity and water and government services are priced incorrectly / being abused as well.

      The city has a hydroelectric dam on city property. As part of the agreement to let a power company run it, they get a certain amount of heavily subsidized electricity. It worked fine for years until bitcoin mining came around.

      What can you do? All these local/town governments were set up with rules dating from 50 years ago, and they've never changed or adapted since.

      Well, you can change the rules or ban mining. Personally, I'm not sympathetic to Silicon Valley's "I invented a new technology, now the laws in place have to change to accommodate me" attitude.

      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
    8. Re:wrong problem by Pinky's+Brain · · Score: 1

      Market rates are also non-linear based on consumption increase over time and duration. A coinminer starts up a lot faster than even a datacenter and drops out a lot faster too. You can't spread your investment for the increased capacity like you can with most normal consumers.

      If cryptominers had to pay the true cost of their folly they'd have to pay multiple times that of normal consumers. Maybe even 10s of times.

    9. Re:wrong problem by Obfuscant · · Score: 1

      It's the kind of city that would also ban solar panels for the same reasons.

      Solar panels that can be seen from off the property certainly would be banned unless they were part of the original structure in any historical district, and historical districts are filled with structures that were built a long time before solar panels existed.

      There was a recent story locally about a property owner being fined because the window frames on his new, energy efficient windows in a historic building didn't look like they were made in 1850. It's hard to make progress anywhere that wants to stay rooted in the 19th century.

    10. Re:wrong problem by Khashishi · · Score: 1

      A citizen pays a lot more taxes per Wh consumed than a cryptominer.

      Maybe it shouldn't be this way.

    11. Re:wrong problem by jd · · Score: 1

      This is a case where you're far better off nationalizing. It's not like everyone has a wire to the power company they specifically buy from. Set the price per watt at 1.25x time the estimated power cost of generating the average bitcoin in the next quarter. That way, it's not economic and we can use electricity for useful things like Folding@Home and BOINC.

      --
      It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
    12. Re:wrong problem by Obfuscant · · Score: 1

      thus have excess cheap power to sell back to the grid or use, bitcoin miners would move in and use up all excess while its cheap, leading to the permanent residents of a town getting no cost benefit to doing it.

      Other than being able to buy the cheap electricity, right, the permanent residents get no benefit.

      You might decide 'fine, let the market decide', so you are forced to build more electricity-producing plants to meet this rising demand and keep pushing costs down or face brownouts / blackouts in residential.

      Costs will go up if you have to build more infrastructure, which should be represented in the rates you charge the customers, in a tiered manner.

      The solution to not having sufficient capacity is to build more. The secondary, temporary solution is to raise prices to reduce demand. That means prices for all uses of electricity. The worst solution is to start banning legal uses, since that only leads to more bans as the demand from other users goes up. That electricity not being used by cryptominers can be used by others, and eventually it will be. What do you do then? Do you build more capacity or ban the latest high-volume uses?

      But the miners move out whenever there's some other better opportunity elsewhere, leaving you with all this infrastructure your permanent residents payed for and are being taxed on...

      This is a case of a city buying electricity from someplace else. They didn't need to build capacity, they need to negotiate a better contract with their provider. They also need to create a tiered rate structure so Gramma doesn't wind up paying for the cryptominer's electricity. When the cryptominer starts paying higher rates and decides to move out, the city is not stuck with unused production facilities, those facilities exist elsewhere and can be used to make electricity that the cryptominers buy from the place they moved to.

      The only reason taxes are involved is because this is a municipal utility. Were it a real electric company (with their own production and not just a reseller) then there would be no tax implications. Since the city is a reseller and not a producer, there are still no taxes involved because the city isn't building production that may or may not become idle.

    13. Re:wrong problem by dwye · · Score: 1

      Personally, I'm not sympathetic to Silicon Valley's "I invented a new technology, now the laws in place have to change to accommodate me" attitude.

      Well, the laws DID change to accommodate them, sort of. :-)

      they get a certain amount of heavily subsidized electricity.

      And there is the problem. It would be just as bad if an aluminum plant moved in. Or another Oak Ridge. Or anything else that required lots of cheap power to be economical.

  5. Not my fault by 110010001000 · · Score: 1

    This isn't my fault. I only use Bitcoin from green sources.

  6. Scenario by SuperKendall · · Score: 2

    *Police bust through the door*
    FREEZE! YOU ARE ALL UNDER ARREST FOR MINin....

    *sees monster MJ grow op with lights and plants everywhere*

    Oh, never mind, carry on then. We thought you had computers usin' all that 'lectricity.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  7. Re:Why is everyone seeing rises? by silas_moeckel · · Score: 1

    You rent out some space in a cheap electrical area when the rates rise you move it elsewhere.

    --
    No sir I dont like it.
  8. Re:Why is everyone seeing rises? by Train0987 · · Score: 1

    Constantly moving to evade capture and the resulting downtime must be factored into your cost of operating. At some point it no longer becomes profitable.

  9. Re:Tragedy of the Commons by Bert64 · · Score: 1

    Their negotiations failed to account for demand... If anything, the presence of cryptocurrency mining operations increased usage and thus increased their bulk negotiation position.

    --
    http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
  10. Re:You Can't Have It Both Ways! by Green+Mountain+Bot · · Score: 2

    Electric vehicles reduce the use of other resources in exchange for increased use of electricity. Bitcoin mining has no such positive externality.

  11. Re:You Can't Have It Both Ways! by Train0987 · · Score: 1

    The story says that a single miner consumed 10% of a region's entire electricity alotment. A single electric vehicle is not going to do that.

  12. Pretty easy to work by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Constantly moving to evade capture and the resulting downtime must be factored into your cost of operating. At some point it no longer becomes profitable.

    A trailer rig full of mining computers that you can quickly hook to a commercial power outlet should do nicely and keep costs of relocation way down.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Pretty easy to work by Train0987 · · Score: 1

      You don't think that would be noticed? Come on, I understand the crypto crazies will believe almost anything but do you truly think they'll believe that would work?

    2. Re:Pretty easy to work by Baton+Rogue · · Score: 1

      A trailer rig full of mining computers that you can quickly hook to a commercial power outlet should do nicely and keep costs of relocation way down.

      I doubt that the amount of electricity needed to run a "trailer rig full of mining computers" is going to require more than just an extension cord that you plug into a wall socket.

    3. Re:Pretty easy to work by silas_moeckel · · Score: 1

      Google and others have been doing DC in a shipping container for a long time.

      --
      No sir I dont like it.
  13. Old ideas that are still unproven by OrangeTide · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If the US didn't learn from the Great Depression that a regulated economy is necessary to avoid misapplication of resources and improper allocation of financial responsibility, then we are all fucked (globally)

    I'm very confident that we learned little. We're still pushing 100 year old ideas of laissez-faire capitalism, supply-side economics, and trickle-down economics. Even in the 19th century the ideas of trickle-down were well known enough to be controversial in its day.

    "That's what happens when the Republicans take over—not only Nixon, but any of them. They simply don't know how to manage the economy. They're so busy operating the trickle-down theory, giving the richest corporations the biggest break, that the whole thing goes to hell in a handbasket." -- President Lyndon B. Johnson

    --
    “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    1. Re:Old ideas that are still unproven by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 3, Interesting

      They simply don't know how to manage the economy.

      Nobody does. It's the authoritarians that think they know how to "manage" an economy better than 300 million free agents that creates nightmares.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    2. Re:Old ideas that are still unproven by mmdurrant · · Score: 1

      I don't think there are enough data points to conclusively determine whether capitalism is better than any other economic system.

      --
      I see my shadow changing, stretching up and over me...
    3. Re: Old ideas that are still unproven by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      I'll take the authoritarians over the people who actually ruin my waking life.

      Are they gaslighting you?

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    4. Re: Old ideas that are still unproven by Wycliffe · · Score: 1

      Maybe the solution to fix our out of touch congress is to make them even more out of touch. If the members of congress were allowed no contact with lobbyists or anyone else during their term and their assets were frozen for their entire term then maybe they could make neutral decisions for the good of everyone. I think hitchhikers guide got it right having a neutral third party in charge.

    5. Re:Old ideas that are still unproven by MercTech · · Score: 1

      Combine fiat money with removing regulations on credit contracts and you get the bubble of the 1920s followed by the crash and depression of 1929. When inflation is killing savings, it makes buying on credit look very very good. But, once the market is saturated the dominoes fall.... falling sales, layoffs, failure to pay revolving credit accounts, economy crashes and burns. Then you have a SEC making sure more money is not loaned than the loaning institution can cover. (broad strokes on the Great Depression) For over 100 years we have the Republican Party trying to give everyone the opportunity to get rich just like they did ignoring that concentrated wealth concentrates power to leverage deals to make sure they and they alone get to keep the wealth. Meanwhile the Democratic Party works hard to make everyone as poor and their neighbor while the old money elite running the party gets to keep all their old families have accumulated to leverage power. Is it really Demos vs Repubs or is it Aristocrats vs Plutocrats?

      --
      NRRPT/RCT
    6. Re:Old ideas that are still unproven by Rolgar · · Score: 1

      Have you considered Distributism? All of the free market prosperity without the corporate shenanigans and extreme concentration of wealth.

      Because Socialism and Capitalism suffer from the same problem, concentration of economic power and therefore political power in the hands of a few well connected individuals.

  14. Economics 101 by Locke2005 · · Score: 1

    No laws required. If you just charge them more for the electricity than the value of the cryptocurrency that can be mined with that electricity, all but the most stupid will stop doing it! I still don't understand why they don't set up commercial operations here in the Northwest, where we have the cheapest electric rates in the country due to proximity to Bonneville Dam.

    --
    I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
    1. Re:Economics 101 by tomhath · · Score: 1

      That just introduces other problems, like trying to separate commercial versus private use inside a private residence. Which also gets you into zoning issues. Bottom line is that they want to sell electricity to residents and businesses that benefit the residents (like restaurants, etc.). There's no reason for them to encourage a short-term fad like coin mining that has no public benefit and then be stuck with extra power capacity when the fad dies.

    2. Re:Economics 101 by jd · · Score: 1

      No problem. You just tell the restaurant owners and customers that the price is prohibitively high because that data centre over there stole all the power. Oh, and baseball bats are 50c each. The marketplace will decide.

      --
      It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
  15. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  16. Plattsburgh's energy ghestopo by WaffleMonster · · Score: 1

    The ONLY solution they should be considering is properly pricing energy.

    1. Re:Plattsburgh's energy ghestopo by tomhath · · Score: 1

      It's a publicly owned utility. The only thing they should be considering is overall public good. The laws capitalism don't apply to the city council.

  17. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  18. Can someone please explain ... by WoodstockJeff · · Score: 1

    ... just what this coin mining is supposed to be DOING? Is it dedicating massive amounts of computing power to solving scientific problems that require more computing power than is otherwise available?

    Or is it just a bunch of computer science geeks figuring out how to make computers play with themselves?

    1. Re:Can someone please explain ... by Actually,+I+do+RTFA · · Score: 1

      Mining is, essentially, a bunch of computers try to crack a password that another bunch of computers made up (and forgot) in the previous mining step.

      So, pretty much less beneficial than either option you suggested. At least when computers play with themselves we get computers who are really good at Go.

      --
      Your ad here. Ask me how!
    2. Re:Can someone please explain ... by vadim_t · · Score: 1

      Bitcoin mining is approximately this:

      1. Take a bunch of transaction data
      2. Append a random number
      3. Hash the entire thing
      4. If the hash starts with enough zeroes (you get a result that looks like 00000A3234...), and you're the first, success! This earns you money.
      5. If the hash doesn't have enough zeroes, pick a different random number, goto 2.

      The number of zeroes you need depends on the difficulty level, and the difficulty level depends on how many people are participating in the network.

      Now, why do this? Because this allows for decentralized generation of money. There's no central authority that can issue coins, but this creates the problem of how do you inject money into the economy without letting everybody who wants to give themselves a billion dollars.

      And this is the solution they came up with. The hashing means anybody can solve the problem, and everyone can verify that it was indeed solved. The difficulty scaling means that as people add computing power, difficulty grows ensuring that money is always injected roughly at the same speed, keeping things stable.

  19. Distributed among ALL users? by superdave80 · · Score: 1

    I live in California, so this may not apply to their situation. Here we have certain 'tiers' of use, and the price increases as you use more. My first 100kwh might cost 15 cents/kwh, but above that, the price rises to 20 cents/kwh for the next 100kwh, and so forth. I think a better solution for this city would be to incorporate something like this, because I'm not sure how you 'ban' a crypotocurrency company, since it's just computers running in a building somewhere. It would be difficult to enforce.

  20. Re:Tragedy of the Commons by Train0987 · · Score: 1

    How to you negotiate a position based on a demand premise that may or may not exist next week, much less next year?

  21. Re:What Authority? by Train0987 · · Score: 1

    By the authority of the people who elected their local leaders.

  22. It should ban all high electricity use by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 2

    Why ban crypto currency alone? That is discrimination.

    --
    sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
    1. Re:It should ban all high electricity use by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 2

      Why ban crypto currency alone? That is discrimination.

      Because it's a useless activity that does nothing for anyone but suck up resources that could be put to productive use?

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    2. Re:It should ban all high electricity use by jd · · Score: 1

      The metal can be used for stuff such that the value it contributes exceeds the value of the metal, the crypto coin can't be used for anything.

      --
      It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
    3. Re:It should ban all high electricity use by youngatheart · · Score: 2
      From TFA:

      the US average is a little over 10 cents per kilowatt-hour...

      Plattsburgh... industrial operations, which include cryptocurrency operations, paid even less at 2 cents per kWh for electricity. Plattsburgh obtains its electricity from a hydroelectric power dam... The city's moratorium isn't designed to remove cryptocurrency mining from Plattsburgh.

      The city was able to make a deal to give a very attractive benefit to it's residents and businesses, a benefit which stopped making sense when they started exceeding their capacity. Now they're having to respond to an emergency situation and doing it thoughtfully. It's only making a big news splash because it has the right buzzwords for clickbait. If this were a city with cheap water responding to a sudden surge in bottled water companies, it'd be the same basic situation, but zero clickbait interest.

  23. Re:You Can't Have It Both Ways! by Gavagai80 · · Score: 1

    Cars are extremely useful, cryptocurrencies provide nothing of value to the economy. Cars charge mostly at night when other use is low, mining rigs usually run all day. It's not hard to see the difference in value.

    --
    This space intentionally left blank
  24. Re:Socialist policies are part of the problem here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    This is a government supplied solution so the power was being sold at 2 cents when the cost is closer to 10 cents nationally. In a proper free market system the price would have gone up and it wouldn't have been cost effective to mine crypto currency here..

    What you see is free market at work. Selling power to large steady-load entities at $.02/kwh is a common and very profitable practice for utilities.
    A large factory that runs 24/7 with a steady load allows the utility to operate their base-load plants at steady state, so a hydro, or nuke plant that has near zero incremental cost for increased load just runs and prints money. It also works almost as well for keeping coal plants running efficiently.
    They charge residential users more because those customers cost more and have spastic loads.

    Alternatively if it was still cost effective due to the lower costs of operating power plants in the region more power would get produced from newer plants that would get built.
    That may not be reality- because the investors in said plants don't see a long term enterprise so they'd end up with a glut of electricity and no customers. However that just means the electricity bills would rise to a point of the national average probably. At that point it's not cost effective to mine. I don't see the problem other than that this city implements socialism rather than leaving it to a free market.

    The way most utilities deal with this is in the contract they have with the user. To get the lowest rate, you must agree to some form of real-time pricing.
    In the southern USA, a factory may be paying .02/kwh normally, but when summer afternoon loads shoot upward, the utility may have to buy outside their system, but everyone in the region has the same problem.
    I've seen prices go over $35.00/kwh for power we had to buy from other utilities during extreme summers.

    So the real-time contract passes the price to the large customers. They usually either shutdown, reduce usage, or some have their own generation that costs like $1-2/kwh, or their own management/engineers make decisions such as "it's only for a couple of hours, bite-the-bullet, keep production going".

    It appears to me that this is really where Plattsville screwed up - they should, but apparently did not, require RTP pricing contracts for their large commercial users.

  25. Re:Tragedy of the Commons by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    except they are subsidizing commercial operators, like these two bitcoin operations. with the expectation that they would have brought jobs, which can then be taxed to recover that subsidy and provide additional revenue to the city.

    So basically they are selling the power to the bitcoin miners either at cost or maybe even at a loss with the expectation of getting jobs. But bitcoin mining doesn't really produce any jobs.

    did the city screw up? yes, and they realized they messed up, thus they are just stopping more crypto miners from moving in until they can figure out how to fix it.

  26. Re:You Can't Have It Both Ways! by religionofpeas · · Score: 1

    Bitcoin mining has no such positive externality.

    Let the market decide. This is not a communist state.

  27. Solid solution by theendlessnow · · Score: 1

    Some suggest that the only way to keep them out is to build a (fire)wall.

  28. Re:You Can't Have It Both Ways! by jd · · Score: 1

    The market was the entire point of Marxist economics and Lenin's strategy. So letting the market decide IS a communist state.

    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
  29. Re:Proof by assertion is not much of a proof by drinkypoo · · Score: 2

    Ummm, no. Capitalism is not the best of the alternatives. I doubt many on Slashdot know of any alternatives. (Communism is not an alternative, it is a theory of control not currency. Barter is not an alternative, barter is simplified capitalism.)

    You could have saved yourself a lot of trouble with a look at a dictionary. The definition of capitalism is that capital controls the means of production. It's not about the form of currency, it's about the form of control.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  30. Re:You Can't Have It Both Ways! by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

    Also, in a generation or two we will be able to use the cars themselves to provide power during short periods when demand exceeds supply. EVs will actually make the grid more stable.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  31. Re:Why is everyone seeing rises? by tsqr · · Score: 1

    So commercial cryptominers don't pay their fair share? Why should rates rise for anyone else?

    Oh right, everything is privatized so fuck the citizenry

    Privatized does not mean what you appear to think it means. The utility is run by the city government.

  32. Re:Why is everyone seeing rises? by wyattstorch516 · · Score: 1

    The town gets a limited amount of cheap electricity from hydro power. That was enough for the people who lived in the town before the miners moved in. Once the miners came in all of the cheap electricity got sucked up and they had to buy the more expensive electricity on the market.

    Blaming this on privatization is immature and infantile. Are you up for tenure at a college university?

  33. Re:Why is everyone seeing rises? by silas_moeckel · · Score: 1

    They are not evading capture they are moving from one cheap power source to another when they raise rates. The problem with their power use was it meant the provider had to buy on the overpriced market vs meeting demand with local generation methods.

    --
    No sir I dont like it.
  34. Re:Tragedy of the Commons by Bert64 · · Score: 1

    If their bulk negotiations allows them to buy power cheaper, then supplying it at cost to bitcoin miners as well as other users provides benefits to all those users.
    Bitcoin miners still have to pay tax on the property which houses their mining equipment, it may not bring in as much tax revenue as a factory full of workers but it still provides benefits to the area.

    --
    http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
  35. Reagan by NewYork · · Score: 1

    "If it moves, tax it. If it keeps moving, regulate it. And if it stops moving, subsidize it." --Reagan