BTC.top Launches ‘Joint Mining’ Platform, Pitching It as a Cloud Mining Killer

Published at: July 25, 2020

China-based mining pool Btc.top wants to upgrade the concept of cloud mining, which allows users to mine crypto remotely by buying a certain amount of hash power from a third-party, with what it calls “joint mining.”

Announced on July 25, the company’s new “joint mining” subsidiary B.top aims to reduce the risks associated with “popular cloud mining products” by offering more flexibility.

Specifically, B.top claims to charge service and maintenance fees to its users only after they have reached the break-even point, meaning that its customers start to share profits when their revenue is equal to the cost they initially paid to purchase the equipment. According to the company, it then starts to charge from 17.5% to 30%, depending on how much their customers invested.

In addition, the B.top claims to be offering mining equipment “at bulk order prices,” allowing users to either purchase shares in single miners, depending on how much terahash (TH) of hash rate they want to own or buy those machines in whole. The latter option supposedly allows the customers to withdraw their equipment from B.top’s mining farms located across China and have it shipped to a destination of their choice, or re-sell their miners back to the company at the resale market price.

“I estimate that other industrial scale mining companies would also soon start offering similar joint mining products,” Btc.top founder and CEO Jiang Zhuoer told Cointelegraph, adding that he expects the offer to be popular among both retail and institutional clients:

“Although B.TOP is aimed at making it easier for individuals to participate in cryptocurrency mining, I believe that it would also attract institutional clients from around the world who would like to take advantage of our industrial scale infrastructure, strategic industry partnerships and lowest electricity rates from our data centers across China.”

According to Zhuoer, some of B.top’s joint mining users in China, where they premiered this program back in March, are willing to invest up to 10-20 million RMB, or $1.4 — 2.8 million. Now, the platform has launched internationally.

B.top claims to charge around 3.3 US cents per kilowatt-hour, although it seems that the price can change once the rainy season in Sichuan is over since at least some of its mining farms are located there. Users are charged for the electricity their equipment consumes throughout the whole program.

China remains king when it comes to mining

While China is currently responsible for as much as 65% of Bitcoin’s total hash rate, according to the Bitcoin Mining Map developed by Cambridge center for alternative finance, some countries choose to crack down on the activity.

Earlier this month, Venezuela, which occupies the 10th spot on the said map, banned crypto mining from state-owned housing.

Tags
Related Posts
Bitmain stops shipment of Antminer crypto mining rigs into China
Bitmain, a Chinese manufacturer of cryptocurrency mining equipment, has been forced to stop its business in China from Oct. 11 following the crypto ban imposed by local authorities. In addition to China’s blanket ban on crypto operations, the company has attributed the move to stop shipping Bitcoin (BTC) and cryptocurrency mining rigs as a response to China’s carbon-neutral policies. According to Bitmain’s announcement: “From October 11, 2021, Antminer will stop shipping to mainland China. For customers in mainland China who have purchased long-term products, our staff will contact them to provide alternative solutions.” While the company has yet to reveal …
Bitcoin / Oct. 10, 2021
No gear, no problem! 3 ways to earn Bitcoin through cloud mining and staking
Bitcoin’s (BTC) rapid recovery above $46,000 has renewed calls for a $100,000 BTC price by the end of 2021, while the effects of China’s crackdown on the mining industry are slowly beginning to fade as the Bitcoin network hash rate shows signs of recovery. One of the side benefits of China’s crackdown is that it has lowered the barriers of entry into the Bitcoin mining space, which has been shown to provide profits in both bull and bear markets. Bitcoin mining is one of the few ways that investors can acquire BTC without directly purchasing it from the market, and …
Bitcoin / Aug. 13, 2021
UK Bitcoin mining revenues soar, but China hogs 75% of ‘blood coin’ production
United Kingdom-based Bitcoin (BTC) mining firm Argo Blockchain just recorded the best quarter in its history, generating record revenues for three months straight. Yet despite the burgeoning cryptocurrency mining venture emerging in the west, the vast majority of Bitcoin production still takes place in China, where cheap, coal-powered electricity fuels an untold number of mining rigs. A recent report by Nature.com revealed that as much as 75% of Bitcoin mining takes place in China — news which must fall hard on the ears of Shark Tank and Dragon’s Den investor Kevin O’Leary, who recently labeled all Bitcoin mined with the …
Technology / April 7, 2021
Chinese Officials Support Renewable Energy-Powered Cryptocurrency Mining
Chinese officials from the city of Ya’an in Sichuan have come out in support of using locally produced hydropower for cryptocurrency mining operations. On April 20 the Municipal Economic and Information Bureau and the Municipal Development and Reform Commission of Ya’an announced an opinion statement on local crypto mining implementation. The document encourages the consumption of hydropower-generated electricity for mining operations. The document stated that the municipality will build a "hydropower consumption demonstration zone" and "big data industry gathering area." Officials believe the province will thus attract investment and development in blockchain companies. Cryptocurrency mining in China China is known …
Bitcoin / April 28, 2020
Is Staking the Answer to Cryptocurrency’s Mining Problems?
For a tech that was supposed to be democratic and distributed in order to free financial systems from the grip of government-influenced banks and return control of the money supply to the people, cryptocurrencies have turned out to be pretty concentrated. Some 66% of all Bitcoin (BTC) mining now takes place in China, with 54% located in the southwest province of Sichuan, as a recent study revealed. Three Chinese mining pools alone are responsible for nearly half of Bitcoin’s hashrate. The days when a single Bitcoin enthusiast could crunch numbers on their home computer and land a Bitcoin reward for …
Blockchain / March 23, 2020