# Сопутствующие статьи по теме Mining

Новостной центр HTX предлагает последние статьи и углубленный анализ по "Mining", охватывающие рыночные тренды, новости проектов, развитие технологий и политику регулирования в криптоиндустрии.

Crypto Morning Brief: U.S. Government Shutdown Ends, MetaMask Integrates Ondo Finance to Launch Tokenized U.S. Stock Trading Feature

This crypto market digest covers key developments from February 3, 2026. The U.S. government ended its partial shutdown after President Trump signed a funding bill. Regulatory progress continues as Senate Democrats plan another closed-door meeting on the CLARITY Act, while the Avalanche Policy Alliance established an advisory committee to push for global regulatory coordination. In product updates, MetaMask integrated with Ondo Finance, enabling non-U.S. users to trade over 200 tokenized U.S. stocks and ETFs directly using USDC. BNB Chain introduced new application-layer standards (BAPs) and a non-fungible agent (NFA) token standard. Tether launched MiningOS, an open-source Bitcoin mining operating system. On the security front, Step Finance confirmed a $40 million treasury exploit due to a team device breach but has recovered approximately $4.7 million so far. Market sentiment was impacted by a triple threat: poor earnings from major tech companies, uncertainty around the new Fed chair nomination, and a sharp correction in precious metals. Bitcoin fell below $80,000, triggering a record $2.55 billion in liquidations. Despite the bearish trend, analysts from Wintermute anticipate a potential market recovery in the second half of 2026, citing solid industry infrastructure. Other notable news includes Tria's tokenomics reveal for its 10 billion TRIA token supply and a court filing suggesting Jeffrey Epstein may have indirectly invested $3.25 million in Coinbase's 2014 Series C round.

marsbit02/04 01:31

Crypto Morning Brief: U.S. Government Shutdown Ends, MetaMask Integrates Ondo Finance to Launch Tokenized U.S. Stock Trading Feature

marsbit02/04 01:31

Epstein's Early Crypto Investments Resurface, Tether Launches Bitcoin Mining OS: What's the Overseas Crypto Community Talking About Today?

In the past 24 hours, the crypto market evolved across multiple fronts. Key discussions centered on structural changes in stablecoins and trading infrastructure, alongside governance and risk debates around exchanges and market-making mechanisms. Mainstream topics included newly disclosed files showing Epstein’s early investments in Coinbase and Blockstream, sparking community debates on Bitcoin’s reputation and decentralization. Several blockchains, including Solana and Monad, launched AI-focused hackathons to advance agent-based trading and automation. Binance’s CZ responded to FUD with selective clarifications, drawing mixed reactions. Tether released MOS, an open-source Bitcoin mining OS aimed at improving efficiency and hardware compatibility. Ecosystem-wise, Solana set new records in daily active transactions, signaling a strong recovery in utility and adoption. Ethereum explored cross-rollup atomic composability to improve interoperability between L2s. Perp DEX Hyperliquid introduced CLI tools for AI-agent trading, advancing automated infrastructure. Other notable updates: stablecoin monthly trading volume surpassed $10 trillion, highlighting growing adoption. Wintermute’s founder criticized internal market makers at some exchanges, raising concerns over liquidity and risk management. Overall, sentiment is cautiously optimistic, with emphasis on infrastructure maturity, AI integration, and the need for robust, decentralized solutions.

marsbit02/03 16:39

Epstein's Early Crypto Investments Resurface, Tether Launches Bitcoin Mining OS: What's the Overseas Crypto Community Talking About Today?

marsbit02/03 16:39

From Libya to Iran: Nations in Blackout, Bitcoin Miners Uninterrupted

From Libya to Iran: Nations in Darkness, Bitcoin Miners That Never Stop In the summer of 2025, Tehran and other parts of Iran faced extreme heat and severe power outages, forcing government offices and schools to shut down. Hospitals relied on diesel generators to keep life-saving equipment running. Yet, behind city walls, rows of Bitcoin mining machines continued operating at full capacity, almost never losing power. Similarly, in Libya, residents endure daily blackouts of 6 to 8 hours, while unauthorized mining farms in abandoned industrial sites run non-stop, using some of the world’s cheapest electricity—subsidized as low as $0.004 per kWh—to mine Bitcoin, often with outdated equipment smuggled into the country. This reflects one of the 21st century’s starkest energy paradoxes: in nations crippled by sanctions and civil conflict, electricity is no longer just a public service but a form of “exportable” hard currency. In Iran, mining was legalized in 2019 as a state strategy to bypass international financial sanctions. Miners were required to sell mined Bitcoin to the central bank. However, an estimated 85% of mining occurred illegally or semi-legally, often with ties to powerful entities. Despite temporary bans and crackdowns, mining rebounded quickly, draining the national grid and worsening public power shortages. Libya, fragmented since the fall of Gaddafi, lacks coherent regulation. Although cryptocurrency transactions and mining imports are officially banned, enforcement is weak. Low subsidized electricity prices create irresistible incentive for mining operators—including foreign groups—to run energy-intensive operations with obsolete machines, while ordinary citizens face daily blackouts. In both countries, Bitcoin mining functions less as a legitimate industry and more as a form of resource extraction: it creates few jobs, contributes little in taxes, and often channels profits overseas. The real cost is borne by society—frequent blackouts, overloaded grids, and compromised public services like healthcare and education. Ultimately, the issue is not Bitcoin itself, but who controls the allocation of public resources. When energy subsidies meant for public welfare are diverted for private gain, it deepens inequality and institutional distrust. As citizens sit in darkness, the miners’ machines continue to hum—a symbol of energy injustice in a fractured world.

marsbit02/02 02:38

From Libya to Iran: Nations in Blackout, Bitcoin Miners Uninterrupted

marsbit02/02 02:38

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