As I read and re-read this, it seems that most of these points are concerning the hiring of additional staff. Right now, we don't care one way or the other how the pool gets stabilized, just that it happen yesterday. As I write this, Prohashing is DOWN and my ant farm is stuck milking bitcoin from NiceHash while the Titan mines 3-5 other pools, which depended largely on the vast amount of data that you provide thanks to your stance on transparency. I'd like to resume that ASAP, but some downtime followed by smooth operation is preferable to a rushed band-aid and more problems.Steve Sokolowski wrote:
Here are some pros and cons:
Pros:
Cons:
- Project is profitable right now
- The very optimistic scenario (profit remaining the same) can generate a ridiculous amount of money
- Analysis has revealed little competition and pools that do exist seem to be unable to invest the money that we can to get ahead of them
- Project allows for a more flexible schedule
- It would be great to be able to provide a better service quality for customers just because they deserve it
- Unlike other businesses, this is still a private company, so nobody else gets a cut, and there would be no need to give away shares to investors because we can spend our own money
As you can see, many of these "cons" are issues that will likely be eliminated with more research as it is performed over the coming days - that's why we're doing the investigation.
- This job isn't as fun or socially rewarding as my current job and requires more work
- Unknown legal risks (this may not be an issue once a lawyer is consulted)
- The last three bubbles have seen big shakeouts after the crash and few miners survived
- The pessimistic scenario of BCC falling and being unable to expand into Dagger-Hasimoto results in only a 30% raise over current salary - insufficient to justify the risk taken if that happens
- Many people involved with cryptocurrency are shady characters and it is not clear what level of manipulation in the marketplace is occurring
- It is uncertain whether single-core hardware is advanced enough to ever be able to produce software to expand significantly (this is one of the areas still under investigation)
- There's a huge amount of pressure being responsible for someone's livelihood when you hire them
- Still investigating whether it's possible that customers who have been turned away by bugs may never return, making it too late to expand
- It may be impossible to prevent all types of DDoS attacks (research is still being performed into this possiblity)
- Bugs could cause enormous legal liability if payouts are made to the wrong people and cause the pool to go bankrupt
This pool should support the miners who actually own equipment. Letting NiceHash renters profit from all of your hard work is precisely what is stabbing you (and us) in the foot right now. At the very least, it should be unprofitable for these "crash miners" to dump ridiculous amounts of hash power on the pool and effectively steal the profits that rightfully belong to the miners who run here 24/7 ... Let them find somewhere else to mine.