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Top 10 Data Center Stories of the Month: July 2021 – Data Center Knowledge

Jim Whitehurst Left IBM Because He'd Rather Be CEO - Contrary to what some may have feared, the exec's departure wasn't a sign that IBM was trying to make Red Hat more like IBM, reneging on its promise earlier.

Xilinx Wants to Flip the CPU-Accelerator Relationship Upside Down - The new Versal HBM accelerator is a kind of self-adapting micro-supercomputer for servers and server clusters.

Why CISAs China Cyberattack Playbook Is Worthy of Your Attention - The advisory outlines the tactics, techniques, and procedures Chinas state-sponsored cybercriminals use to breach networks.

Equinix Sees 5G as a Chance to Seed a New Interconnection Ecosystem - Blurring of the boundaries between 5G and cloud infrastructure may be an opportunity for the colocation giant.

Vertiv CEO Rob Johnson On the Pandemic, Supply Chain Woes, and Data Center Tech - The Data Center Podcast: Managing through a global health crisis and parts shortages amid a demand crunch.

Security Problems Worsen as Enterprises Build Hybrid and Multicloud Systems - Under pressure to accelerate cloud adoption, IT orgs often skip over crucial security planning steps.

Microsoft Pledges to Emit Zero Carbon By 2030 - Taking another climate moonshot, Microsoft has set out to crack a problem that will require a complete rethink of the worlds electric grids.

Vertiv CEO Says Data Center Supply Chain Crunch Is Driving Up Costs - Rising component and materials costs and skyrocketing data center demand make a perfect storm.

The Kaseya Ransomware Attack Is a Wakeup Call for MSP-Reliant IT Shops - The pandemic has driven more outsourcing to MSPs, making them prime targets for cybercriminals wanting to scale their attacks.

Azrieli Makes Bigger Data Center Bet with Green Mountain Acquisition - The Israeli developer has agreed to acquire the Norwegian data center operator for $850 million.

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Top 10 Data Center Stories of the Month: July 2021 - Data Center Knowledge

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RMIT to Implement Dedicated Cloud Supercomputing Facility on AWS to Boost Research Capabilities – HPCwire

July 30, 2021 The Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT) cloud supercomputing facility is designed to help more researchers and students within RMITs industry hubs including Industry 4.0, advanced manufacturing, space, fintech, digital health, and creative technologies to innovate beyond the limitations of on-premises HPC infrastructure and accelerate time-to-science.

The cloud supercomputing facility will use AWS to provide elastic, secure, and scalable cloud infrastructure forresearchers and students within RMITs industry hubs including Industry 4.0, advanced manufacturing, space,fintech, digital health, and creative technologiesto run high performance computing (HPC) applications with seamless access.

Workloads such as genomic sequencing, autonomous vehicle simulations, and atmospheric modelling are often too large to run using traditional servers. HPC on AWS provides virtually unlimited compute capacity that meets the infrastructure requirements of almost any application, allowing researchers to process huge volumes of data to help solve some of the worlds most complex challenges in far less time from disease prevention, extreme weather forecasting, and citizen safety.

RMIT will leverage AWSDirect Connectwhichenables customers to have low latency, secure and private connections to AWS for workloads which require higher speed or lower latency than the internet.The increased bandwidthwill giveresearchers, students, staff, andindustrypartnersthe ability to experiment and test new ideasand discoveriesinvolvinglarge data setsat speed, fast-tracking the time between concept andproducts thatRMITare ready to take to market.

RMIT will also collaborate withtelecommunicationsprovider,AARNet, which will providehigh-speedinternet and communicationservices,andglobal technology company,Intel,foritsadvanced technology solutionsto process, optimise,store,and movelarge, complicateddata sets.

RMITDeputy Vice-Chancellor (STEMCollege) andVice President Digital Innovation,ProfessorAleksandarSubicsaid the facility, supported by theVictorian Government Higher Education Investment Fund,is a pioneering example of innovation in theuniversitysector.

Ourcollaborationwith AWS, Intel,and AARNET toestablishAustralias firstcloudsupercomputing facilityrepresents a step change in how universities and industriesaccessHPCcapabilitiesfor advanced data processing and computing,Subic said.

Byleveraging AWS Direct Connect,RMITis set toaccess tremendous HPC processing powerusing a unique service modelthat provides seamless access to allourstaff, researchers, and students.

Ourindustry partnerswill also haveaccess to thenewcloudsupercomputing facility through joint projects and programs.

The facility will be operated by our researchers and studentsin another example that shows how industryengagement and work integrated learning are in our DNA.

AWSDirector andCountryLeaderfor Worldwide Public Sectorin Australia and New Zealand, Iain Rouse,said AWS helps researchersquickly analyse massive amounts of data, and share their results with collaborators around the world.

With access to the broadest and deepest portfolio of cloud services, RMIT can innovate beyond the limitations of on-premisescomputing,and keep up with scientific advancesworldwide.

We are proud to support ground-breaking research initiatives in collaboration with RMIT,which is set to enable researchers, students, and industry acrossabroadrange of sectorstodesign solutions and bring them to market sooner, all of which wouldnt be possible at the speed and scale without the elasticity of the cloud.

AARNetCEO Chris Hancock saidAARNethad provided RMIT and other Australian universities with leading-edge telecommunications services to enable transformational research outcomes for decades.

Weve also been connecting researchers to the cloud for many years, but nothing on this scale, he said.

Were excited to be partnering with RMIT on this project that uses our ultra-fast network to remove the barrier of geography and distance for research across Australia and beyond.

RMITs newSchool of Computing Technologies, a centre for digital innovation, world-class research, and education in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics, launched earlier this year. The centre will support the development and operation of the cloud supercomputer, building on its sector-leading capabilities in cloud technologies.

Source: Amelia Harris, RMIT

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Morphisec is Named A Finalist for the Top 10 Black Unicorns – PR Web

Morphisec Logo

BEER SHEVA, Israel and BOSTON (PRWEB) August 02, 2021

Morphisec, a leader in cloud-delivered endpoint and server security solutions, has been named as a finalist for the Top Ten 10 Black Unicorns in the Black Unicorn Awards for 2021. The Cyber Defense Black Unicorn Awards showcase Black Unicorns, in a category that judges cybersecurity companies with the potential to be valued at $1B within the next 36 months.

Morphisec was chosen as a finalist among the top ten Black Unicorns from an extensive number of submissions from the most promising cybersecurity companies. All entrants are targeting a public offering or being acquired for more than $1B. The recognition comes on the heels of Morphisec raising $31M earlier this year to enable every business to simply and automatically prevent the most dangerous cyberattacks.

Midsized enterprises are historically underserved by the cybersecurity market and their challenges have increased exponentially in the last year as the pandemic and work-from-home has made perimeter-based security irrelevant, said Morphisec CEO Ronen Yehoshua. Morphisec has proven to be the only cybersecurity solution capable of providing affordable, simple, and effective protection for their distributed workforces against a seemingly endless amount of ransomware, malware and evasive attacks.

Today, Morphisec protects more than 8 million endpoints and workloads in a low-cost, automated, and deterministic fashion. Morphisec comes to these organizations defense without needing dedicated security teams to respond to and investigate attacks automatically stopping the most dangerous attacks targeting workstations, VDIs, servers, virtual machines, and cloud workloads.

Its exciting to see Morphisec making it into our Top Ten Black Unicorns among other cybersecurity industry leaders, said Judges Robert R. Ackerman Jr. of http://www.allegiscyber.com, David DeWalt of http://www.nightdragon.com and Gary Miliefsky of http://www.cyberdefensemediagroup.com.

About Morphisec

Morphisec is the world leader in providing advanced security solutions for midsize to small enterprises around the globe. The companys security products simplify and automatically block modern attacks from the endpoint to the cloud. Unlike traditional security solutions relying on human intervention, Morphisec delivers operationally simple, proactive prevention. This approach protects businesses around the globe with limited security resources and training from the most dangerous and sophisticated cyber attacks.

About the Cyber Defense Black Unicorn Awards

This is Cyber Defense Magazines 9th year of honoring cybersecurity innovators through the Black Unicorn Awards for 2021 on its Cyber Defense Awards platform. In this competition, judges for these prestigious awards includes cybersecurity industry veterans, trailblazers and market makers Gary Miliefsky of CDMG, Robert R. Ackerman Jr. of Allegis Cyber and David DeWalt of NightDragon with much appreciation to emeritus judge Robert Herjavec of Herjavec Group. To see the complete list of finalists for the Black Unicorn Awards for 2021 please visit https://cyberdefenseawards.com/black-unicorn-awards-for-2021-the-winners/

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Azure Sentinel in the Real World – Virtualization Review

Azure Sentinel in the Real World

Smaller organizations need the same IT security services as larger businesses but without the corresponding price tag, says Paul Schnackenburg, so he decided to "build a SIEM for SMBs" on a shoestring budget.

Back in mid-2019 we looked at Azure Sentinel (then recently released), Microsoft's cloud-based Security Information and Event Management (SIEM). In this article I'll guide you through a real-world Sentinel deployment for one of my clients, lessons learned and some thoughts around SMB cybersecurity in general.

Stuck in the MiddleMy business has been providing IT services to SMBs since 1998 so I know the challenges and limitations of the "smaller end of town" intimately. The move to cloud is completed for most of my clients, with some still in a hybrid world with a few workloads on-premises.

Just like larger businesses, SMBs feel the pressure of shrinking IT budgets, the challenge of the Covid pandemic and, most of all -- the changing cybersecurity landscape. But there's no way that they are going to be able to afford a full-blown Managed Detection and Response (MDR) solution, backed by a 24/7/365 Security Operations Center (SOC).

So, I do what I can -- I deploy centrally managed antimalware on each endpoint, I ensure they have a business class firewall for their offices, I provide security awareness training and simulated phishing campaigns and I configure their cloud services according to best practices. I also make sure they have solid backups, with copies stored off site. But my concern is the same as many larger organizations, the lack of visibility -- if (when) they're compromised we won't know about it until it's too late. It's the same dilemma as always: SMBs need the same IT services as larger businesses but without the corresponding price tag.

When I saw that Sentinel provided several free data sources (Azure activity, Office 365 audit logs and alerts from the Microsoft 365 Defender suite) as long as I don't retain it for longer than 90 days and that Sentinel has connectors for nearly every data source, I decided to see if I could "build a SIEM for SMBs" on a shoestring budget.

The client I started with is an independent school with approximately 90 students, from year 1 to year 12, plus about 20 staff. They have Microsoft 365 A3 (equivalent to E3 in the commercial world) deployed to all staff and students and two on-premises Dell Hyper-V hosts running Windows Server 2019 with a total of seven VMs. The newer server runs all VMs, and the older server is in a separate building as a Hyper-V replica target for DR. The VMs are two DCs, a file/print server, a LOB app, Windows Server Update Services (WSUS), Microsoft's Advanced Threat Analytics (ATA) and a Linux syslog server (more on that last one later).

Connecting Data SourcesI set up an Azure account for the client, based on the same Azure Active Directory as their Microsoft 365 tenant, and deployed a Log Analytics workspace with Azure Sentinel on top of it in the Australia East region (I always use https://www.azurespeed.com/ to make sure I host resources in the closest region whenever possible). I set the retention to 90 days (as that's free), but I know that many security professionals will probably choke on their morning coffee reading that because it severely limits the ability to find intruders with long dwell times -- many organizations (and regulatory frameworks) require several years of retention. But the aim here is to fit within a small budget and provide visibility to catch the bad guys early, so 90 days it is.

Next, I configure Data connectors (there are 116 to pick from at the time of writing with more being added each week) -- Azure AD, DNS, Office 365, Security Events, Threat intelligence -- TAXII and Windows Firewall.

Two of those are simple cloud connectors, just provide Global Administrator (or Security Administrator) credentials and pick what to ingest, here's the configuration for AAD:

Most connectors come with workbooks for visualization; here's a workbook for Office 365:

These give you a way to visualize and dig into normal activity by your users, in this case what they do across OneDrive, Exchange, SharePoint and Teams.

The DNS, Security events and Windows Firewall connectors rely on log data from the on-premises VMs and hosts. On each of them I installed the Microsoft Monitoring Agent (MMA) and configured them with the workspace ID and primary key from the Log Analytics workspace. This is a simple install If you have servers that don't have internet connectivity, you can use the Log Analytics gateway to proxy the uploads, but that's not an issue at this client. If I was going to do this again, I would instead opt for the newer Azure Monitoring Agent (AMA) as it's the future log collecting agent across both Windows and Linux. One benefit of AMA are data collection rules that let you filter to collect only specific log entries using XPath queries, but fortunately the Security events connector with MMA lets you filter on Minimal or Common (or all) events. I picked Common.

Again, in an ideal world I would deploy the agent on all client endpoints as well for full visibility of all security events across all nodes (which I'll do at my next client who only has 10 client devices and a NAS file server), but at this client I'll need to watch the ingestion cost carefully before expanding log collection.

The last data connector is Threat intelligence -- TAXII, which is one way to ingest TI data into Sentinel. Based on this blog post I connected to Anomali's free intel feed to get data on new ransomware domains/IPs, malware domains, TOR nodes, C2 servers and compromised hosts.

Rules, Log Queries and WorkbooksOnce the data is in Sentinel it's time to mine it for suspicious activity. Sentinel comes with hundreds of built-in analytics rules templates -- I looked through the list (filtering on High and Medium severity) to start with and enabled all of them that relied on the data connectors we have.

Here's an example of one such rule -- Rare RDP Connections -- which identifies when a new or unusual connection is made to any of our servers (RDP is only available on the internal network).

I've set up most of these rules to run once a day to generate alerts.

When you're trying to understand the data you have you can use Logs to explore the different data sources and tables. Here I'm looking at the data coming back from Windows Firewall on the servers.

Most connectors come with a set of workbooks, which is another way of visualizing the data. Here's the Insecure Protocols workbook, aggregating legacy protocols in use across AD and AAD in the last seven days.

AutomationAlerts in the portal are great -- once you see them you can start an investigation to determine if this is really a malicious issue that needs further investigation or a benign false positive. But as mentioned, there's just me and I certainly have better things to do than sitting and staring at a portal UI all day. Each alert rule has the ability to configure an automated response when it's triggered, but I didn't want to have to set up and maintain this for each rule, so I created a single Logic App that catches any alert and emails it to me (and the local IT teacher at the school).

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Azure Sentinel in the Real World - Virtualization Review

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Where Are Bitcoin Prices Headed After Their Latest Pullback? – Forbes

Technical analysts weighed in after bitcoin's latest price movements. (Photo illustration by ... [+] Chesnot/Getty Images)

Bitcoin prices have been trading primarily between $30,000 and $42,000 since late May, but recently, they have repeatedly attempted to mount convincing breakouts.

In the last week, the cryptocurrency surpassed the upper limit of the aforementioned range multiple times, CoinDesk figures show.

It reached $42,351.93, $42,369.39 and $42,435.07 on July 30, July 31, and August 1, respectively, additional CoinDesk data reveals.

More recently, the digital asset has fallen back somewhat, declining to as little as $38,978.57 this morning, down roughly 8.1% from yesterdays recent high.

[Ed note: Investing in cryptocoins or tokens is highly speculative and the market is largely unregulated. Anyone considering it should be prepared to lose their entire investment.]

Key Technical Levels

Keeping these latest developments in mind, several technical analysts weighed in, shedding some light on bitcoins crucial levels of support and resistance.

Katie Stockton, the founder and managing partner ofFairlead Strategies, LLC, offered some perspective:

Bitcoin has broken through the resistance I have been highlighting defined by the cloud model, which lowers over time, she stated.

It previously was near $42K, but has since lowered to below $38K, such that a breakout has already been confirmed above cloud-based resistance.

A Fibonacci retracement level near $42.6K remains intact as resistance, however, so I would imagine some are focused on that, Stockton added.

Once that level is surmounted, the targeted level becomes $51.1K based on the Fibonacci levels, she concluded.

William Noble, the chief technical analyst of research platform Token Metrics, also chimed in.

Bitcoin is facing substantial resistance near $43k, he stated, adding that this resistance is clear on charts.

Potential Opportunity

Noble spoke to the recent pullback, describing bitcoins recent drop to roughly $39,000 as an opportunity to get involved if you missed the rally.

The decline in bitcoin from $42k to $39k is likely a pause that refreshes, he stated.

Mark Warner, head of trading at BCB Group, also offered a bullish take.

There are many sellers at $42,000, where longs have been trapped since 19 May, so we expect more resistance at this level. A confirmation of the breakout, by BTC retesting $34,500-$36,000, could provide buying opportunities for those who missed out.

Downside Risk

While the aforementioned analysts focused on bitcoins resistance and potential buying opportunities, other market observers commented on how the digital currency could suffer further losses.

Julius de Kempenaer, senior technical analyst at StockCharts.com, spoke to this.

BTC is still in its trading range and, as a matter of fact, BTC seems to be respecting the technical boundaries of that trading range ($30k-$42k) fairly well so far, he said.

Unless we see a clear break above that upper boundary, the risk now seems to be the downside again.

Jason Lau, COO of cryptocurrency exchange Okcoin, also weighed in.

Bitcoin's been stuck in this range for the past few months and resistance at the $42k level was expected, he noted.

Bitcoin last hit this range in mid June and fell 30% the following week, Lau emphasized.

Key metrics around BTC futures and premiums look similar to the last time, he said.

BTC futures open interest has rebounded in past few days, but at similar levels to mid June.

Since 7/31, BTC futures funding rates have turned positive, having been mostly negative for the past few weeks. Again, we are now at similar levels to mid June.

Looking ahead, we would need to see a clean price break above $42,000, along with a strong uptick in BTC futures funding rates, before we can confirm a breakout of the range, said Lau.

Disclosure: I own some bitcoin, bitcoin cash, litecoin, ether and EOS.

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Where Are Bitcoin Prices Headed After Their Latest Pullback? - Forbes

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Green Bitcoin Mining: The Big Profits In Clean Crypto – Forbes

This story appears in the August/September 2021 issue of Forbes Magazine. Subscribe

(IMAGE ABOVE) Bill Spence and Greg Beard on a Russellton, Pennsylvania, coal waste pile left by a mine that powered 20th-century Pittsburgh steelmakers. Theyre burning this polluting gob to mine bitcoin.

Growing up in rural western Pennsylvania in the early 1970s, Bill Spence played with his pals on piles of coal waste, oblivious to the toxic heavy metals right under his feet. After working as an oil industry engineer out west, he returned home in the 1990s and found the pilesknown as gob, for garbage of bituminousstill pockmarking the landscape. The present worry is that these unlined pits are leaching deadly carcinogens into the groundwateror, worse, that they will catch fire and start polluting the air, too. (Of the 772 gob piles in Pennsylvania, 38 are smoldering.)

So Spence, now 63, set out on a mission to whittle down the piles, restore the landand make money doing it. In 2017, he bought control of the Scrubgrass Generating power plant in Venango County, north of Pittsburgh, which was specially designed to combust gob. But gob isnt a very good fuel, and the plant was barely viable. Later that year, after being diagnosed with pancreatic failure and kidney cancer (which he speculates may have been linked to his early gob exposure), he stepped back from the business. Bored, he started dabbling in cryptocurrencies and soon had a eureka moment: He could make the Scrubgrass numbers work by turning gob into bitcoin.

After surgery and being taken off a feeding tube, Spence is now back at it, converting the detritus of 20th-century heavy industry into 21st-century digital gold. About 80% of Scrubgrass 85,000-kilowatt output is now used to run powerful, energy-hungry computers that validate bitcoin transactions and compete with computers worldwide to solve computational challenges and earn new bitcoinsa process known as mining. Depending on the price of bitcoin, which has recently been gyrating around $35,000, Scrubgrass realizes an estimated 20 cents or more per kilowatt hour (kwh) from mining, against just 3 cents selling to the power grid. Plus, because the plant is safely disposing of gob, it collects Pennsylvania renewable-energy tax credits now worth about 2 cents per kwh, the same as those available for hydropower.

Spence is one of an emerging cohort of American bitcoin miners who are turning one of the cryptocurrencys biggest liabilitiesits insatiable thirst for energyinto an asset. Whether theyre getting rid of waste fuels like gob, helping balance the electric grid in Texas or tapping into the flares at oil-and-gas fields, these cryptopower entrepreneurs are profiting by turning digital lemons into green lemonade. And with countries such as China, Indonesia and Iran moving either to severely restrict bitcoin mining or ban it altogether, the opportunity for domestic producers has never been greater. From just a 4% share two years ago, the U.S. has grown into the worlds second-largest miner, now accounting for 17% of all new bitcoins, according to the University of Cambridge Center for Alternative Finance.

The Belly of the Beast: At Riot Blockchains bitcoin mining facility in Rockdale, Texas, exhaust from some of the stacks of 120,000 energy-sucking computers pushes the temperature up to 130 degrees.

For all bitcoins purported benefits, its also clear that the currency is an environmental disaster. Depending on bitcoins cost (a higher price attracts more miners), its global network sucks up between 8 and 15 gigawatts of continuous power, according to Cambridge. New York City runs on just 6 gigawatts, the nation of Belgium on 10. Exactly how much carbon is released into the atmosphere by bitcoin mining depends entirely on what energy source is used. But the pollution is not negligible. To unlock a single bitcoin, miners must feed their machines about 150,000 kwh, enough juice to power 170 average U.S. homes for a month.

Its especially frustrating that high-energy inputs arent a bitcoin bug but rather a feature. Sure, some portion of the electricity is used to validate transactions, but much is seemingly wasted solving flat-out useless mathematical problems. This proof of work is simply a way to create artificial scarcity, making it far too expensive for any one group to corner or manipulate the market. In a 2010 message board comment, Satoshi Nakamoto, the pseudonymous creator of bitcoin, made no apologies: Its the same situation as gold and gold mining. The marginal cost of gold mining tends to stay near the price of gold. Gold mining is a waste, but that waste is far less than the utility of having gold available as a medium of exchange. I think the case will be the same for bitcoin. The utility of the exchanges made possible by bitcoin will far exceed the cost of electricity used.

Of course, the system could have been designed differently. There are serious cryptocurrencies, including ethereum, cardano, stellar, Ripples XRP and algorand, which use vastly less energy than bitcoin or are being modified to do so. Ethereum, for instance, is transitioning next year from proof of work to a system called proof of stake, which cuts energy use by 99.95%. Theres even a new currency, candela, whose protocol requires solar-powered mining.

But bitcoin isnt going anywhere. Its first-mover advantage has translated into a recent market cap of $700 billion, more than the five next most valuable cryptocurrencies combined. (Ether, the second most popular, has a market cap of $250 billion.) And bitcoin mining is unlikely to get much less energy-intensive. Its algorithm forces miners to compete to unlock each new coin, and that competition will continue until the last bitcoin is mined, sometime around 2140. Registering a transaction on the bitcoin blockchain takes a million times more energy than processing one on Visas bank network. (Backers say a new Lightning transaction network designed to operate atop bitcoin could make it even more efficient than Visa.)

If you think its fake money, then any amount of energy use will be too much, observes Ted Rogers, vice chairman of Greenidge Generation Holdings, which operates a power plant and bitcoin mining facility on Lake Seneca in upstate New York. But bitcoin is not going away, and it is going to be the global reserve currency and the center of the future financial world.

If you think bitcoin is fake money, then any amount of energy use will be too much.

To see how green bitcoin can be, look no further than the Lone Star State, whose independent power grid famously failed during last winters deep freeze. Dozens of power plants were knocked offline, causing billions of dollars in property damage, and some retail customers were presented with monthly bills as high as $17,000. While the directors of the comically named Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT) have since resigned, the states politiciansbeyond mandating that plants prepare better for winter weatherhavent done much to reform the system.

Fortunately, the free market seems to be coming to the rescue, with 16 gigawatts of new wind and solar projects set for construction in West Texas over just the next year. During normal conditions this will be far more electricity than is needed to fill the Texas demand gap. But it will also ensure that theres enough power for extreme events like ice storms and summer heat waves. Bitcoin miners are acting as a kind of shock absorber for this new green power. They buy up excess energy when its not needed, then shut down their mining rigs when demand surges, releasing power back onto the grid.

West Texas is going to dominate; it will all come here, predicts Jesse Peltan, 24, CTO of Dallas-based Autonomous (and a member of the 2021 Forbes 30 Under 30). Last year Peltan helped launch a 150-megawatt crypto mining data center near Midland called HODL Ranch, named for crypto hoarders who buy and then (typo intended) hodl on for dear life. Its the first large-scale operation to be powered by the regions massive solar and wind farms. Some nights the gusts are so ferocious that grid operators give away power just to keep the system from overloading.

Heres the key: These miners have entered into so-called demand response contracts with the Texas grid, whereby they agree, in exchange for rebates, to shut down their computers at a moments notice during times of peak power demand. This brings average power costs at HODL Ranch down below 2 cents per kwh, for a mining cost close to $2,000 per bitcoin.

In Texas, bitcoin miners act as a shock absorber for new green power, buying energy when its not needed and shutting their rigs when demand surges.

The largest bitcoin mining operation in America is also in Texas, operated by publicly traded Riot Blockchain ($3 billion market cap) in Rockdale, northeast of Austin, near a giant interconnection that moves 5,000 MW of grid power through a maze of transformers and high-voltage lines. Riot taps directly into this interconnection to draw 300 MW of that juice, which powers 120,000 high-speed mining computers stacked in racks 30 feet high in three narrow buildings, each longer than two football fields. Construction is under way to expand to 750 MW, with 130,000 more machines to be installed by the end of 2022.

Riot has a ten-year contract to buy all the power it needs in Rockdale at a bargain 2.5 cents per kwh, counting a 0.5-cent-per-kwh discount it gets for participating in demand response. It also has the option to resell all its power to the grid. During the Texas freeze, the Rockdale facility voluntarily shut down all mining for two days. Assuming it earned the peak price of $9 per kwh, thats a $90 million windfall. At this scale of energy procurement, we are not just mining bitcoin, says CEO Jason Les. Instead, Riot is acting as a virtual power plant.

Les, 35, studied computer science at UC Irvine but first learned about bitcoin while playing professional poker in the mid-2010sand seeing other players use it to hold and move their winnings without banks. Hes not bothered by bitcoins volatility, because hes all in: When massive price swings come, they dont affect me whatsoever. In poker, if youre good, youre still losing 45% of the time. Im very comfortable with losing.

An even bigger technological green gamble is being taken by Crusoe Energy Systems, which has raised $250 million, mostly to mine bitcoin in the middle of remote oil-and-gas fields in six states, including New Mexico, Texas and North Dakota. Investors include Bain Capital, Valor Equity Partners, Tesla cofounder J.B. Straubel and the twin-brother crypto billionaires Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss. Crusoe has deployed 45 shipping containers stuffed with bitcoin mining computers, which are powered using natural gas that otherwise would have been burned off or flared. (When drillers complete new oil wells but dont yet have pipelines hooked up to gather the natural gas, they set it on fire, since allowing it to simply waft into the atmosphere would be even worse for global warming.)

We underestimated the operational complexities in the business, admits Crusoe cofounder Chase Lochmiller, a 35-year-old veteran of crypto investment firm Polychain Capital. The startup has found it a challenge to maintain containers spread out across the vast landscape, particularly during the heat of the summer. While Crusoe is unlikely ever to scale up to Riots size and profitability, it is already diverting 10 million cubic feet per day of gas that would otherwise be flared. We think the best way to improve the carbon economics of an oilfield is to add a few bitcoin rigs, Lochmiller says.

Reclaiming history: Spence and Beard of Stronghold walk the Russellton site, which produced metallurgical coal for Pittsburgh steelworks a century ago.

What really counts as green energy? Wind and solar power, for sure. Other sources can be a tougher call.

On the banks of New Yorks Lake Seneca, the Greenidge Generation plant produces 80 MW of power, using about half to mine crypto. Private equity firm Atlas Holdings, based in Greenwich, Connecticut, bought the mothballed plant in 2014 and invested tens of millions to upgrade it to run on natural gas. That means it emits just a quarter of the carbon dioxide it did during the previous six decades, when it ran on coal, and none of the sulfur compounds or particulate matter.

So far, so green. Yet, as it did when it was powered by coal, the plant sucks in up to 100 million gallons of water daily for cooling, returning it to Lake Seneca about seven degrees warmer. Local environmentalists call it a giant fish blender and blame the heated water for lowering oxygen levels and contributing to algae blooms. A bill that would have banned crypto mining in New York for three years died in a state assembly committee in June. Greenidge has been further greenwashing its bitcoin by acquiring CO2 allowances and forestry offsets. CEO Jeff Kirt notes the plants discharge water is well within regulatory limits and says it has been adding more screening systems to protect Senecas trout. The company plans to go public later this year.

Back in Pennsylvania, environmentalists arent entirely thrilled that Spences Scrubgrass plant gets the same subsidy as hydropower. But the state has decided its better to have carbon dioxide emitted by a gob-burning power plant than to leave the stuff in polluting pits.

The problem is real, Spence insists. The only way to fix it is these plants. The technology at Scrubgrass wasnt widely used until the 1990s and is expensive. A special reactor burns the gob, rocks and all, producing a high-pH ash that is applied to the remaining piles to neutralize their acidity. The economics make sense only with the addition of bitcoin mining. Spence has a new, well-connected partner in Greg Beard, who until 2019 headed natural-resources investing at private equity giant Apollo Global Management. The two cofounded Stronghold Digital Mining, which now owns Scrubgrass. With Beard, 49, as CEO, Stronghold raised $105 million in June from private investorsenough to buy more bitcoin mining equipment and acquire a second and possibly third gob-burning plantand has filed preliminary papers to go public. Beard says he never saw anything like this during his two decades in private equity. This is the most important growth play in a generation.

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Green Bitcoin Mining: The Big Profits In Clean Crypto - Forbes

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Bitcoin Drops After Posting Biggest Weekly Gain in Three Months – Yahoo Finance

(Bloomberg) --

Bitcoin pulled back to around $40,000 after climbing over the weekend to the highest levels since May.

The largest cryptocurrency fell about 4.8% to $39,280 as of 8:42 a.m. in New York after dropping as much as 5.6% Monday. Other virtual coins including second-ranked Ether also fell. Analysts suggested profit-taking lay behind the declines.

This is just a normal pullback following bullish action, said Vijay Ayyar, head of Asia Pacific with crypto exchange Luno in Singapore.

The declines put Bitcoin back in the top end of a $30,000 to $40,000 trading range thats been in place since a cryptocurrency rout in May. It touched $42,605 on Sunday, the highest since May. It rallied almost 20% last week, the biggest increase in three months.

The token has been helped in recent weeks by supportive comments from billionaire Elon Musk and Ark Investment Management LLCs Cathie Wood, as well as speculation over Amazon.com Inc.s possible involvement in the cryptocurrency sector.

At the same time, scrutiny of the industry is intensifying. That includes a push by U.S. legislators for stricter rules on cryptocurrency investors to collect more taxes to fund a portion of a planned $550 billion investment into transportation and power systems.

Crypto traders are also awaiting a software upgrade expected this week to the Ethereum network. It could boost Ethers price by trimming the pace at which the tokens supply grows.

(Updates prices in second paragraph.)

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Bitcoin Drops After Posting Biggest Weekly Gain in Three Months - Yahoo Finance

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From the Senate’s infrastructure bill proposal to record trading volume for NFTs: 5 key things that happened in crypto this past week – CNBC

Bitcoin, the largest cryptocurrency by market value, extended its rally into the weekend. It surpassed $42,000 on Sunday, which was its highest since May. But its price since leveled, and as of Monday morning, is trading at around $39,800.

Bitcoin's moves aren't the only things happening in crypto right now. From the Senate's infrastructure bill proposal to a record trading volume for NFTs, or nonfungible tokens, here are five key things that happened in crypto this past week.

This past week, Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., doubled down on her calls for more crypto regulation.

On July 26, Warren sent a letter to Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen pressing the Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC) to coordinate a "cohesive regulatory strategy" surrounding cryptocurrency. "I urge FSOC to act with urgency and use its statutory authority to address cryptocurrencies' risks and ensure the safety and stability of our financial system."

Warren also spoke during the Senate Banking Committee hearing on Tuesday titled "Cryptocurrencies: What are they good for?" There, she continued her critique of the space. "Crypto puts the [financial] system at the whims of some shadowy, faceless group of super-coders and miners," Warren said.

On Wednesday, Warren told CNBC's "Squawk Box" that she's skeptical bitcoin will prove to be a reliable hedge against inflation over time.

Last week, the Senate's bipartisan infrastructure bill proposal sparked concern within the crypto community after a provision of the package detailed plans to impose stricter rules regarding tax collection on "digital assets."

Initially, the bill defined a cryptocurrency "broker" very broadly, and many worried that the provision would include people like miners who wouldn't have access to the information needed to comply.

On Sunday, however, the Senate released its latest version of the bill, which clarified its definition. If passed, the provision would define a "broker" as "any person who (for consideration) is responsible for regularly providing any service effectuating transfers of digital assets on behalf of another person."

Still, the Blockchain Association urges for more changes. "While some minor improvements have been made, the latest language still poses fundamental concerns and questions about certain terms and definitions used in the provision," Kristin Smith, executive director of the Blockchain Association, said in a statement. "[T]his provision is written in a way that could be interpreted to apply to persons in the crypto ecosystem who don't have access to the information required for information reporting."

The latest draft of the infrastructure bill includes raising nearly $30 billion from cracking down on crypto tax evasion.

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From the Senate's infrastructure bill proposal to record trading volume for NFTs: 5 key things that happened in crypto this past week - CNBC

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Celsius CEO still sees Bitcoin finishing the year between $140-160K – Yahoo Finance

Celsisus CEO Alex Mashinsky joins Yahoo Finance to discuss the latest in cryptocurrency and why he believes Bitcoin's value will more than triple to end the year.

ADAM SHAPIRO: We got to turn our attention to what's going on in the crypto corner because Bitcoin is trading lower right now but look, it's not far off of the $40,000 mark. But let's talk about what's going to happen in a greater context with crypto and we're going to do that with Alex Mashinsky. He is the CEO of Celsius. And the potential for crypto to be used on different platforms to pay for stuff, not necessarily a pure-play to just buy the crypto coin but to use it do you see that taking on greater relevance?

ALEX MASHINSKY: So crypto's main purpose is a store value, right? It is not an exceptional form of payment I think the dollar is the opposite, right? It's an exceptional form of payment but not very good store of value. So I think there are many, many other cryptocurrencies or digital assets that serve that purpose better. Mostly, Stablecoins and other forms of digital assets. So I don't think you want to take this pristine asset and try to use it to clean the windows or do something else with it. It is very good for one thing, store of value and that's what you should be using it for.

SEANA SMITH: Alex, we're looking at a chart here of Bitcoin right now, it's trading just below $40,000. I guess what do you think is going to be that next catalyst to get it above $40,000? We were briefly there last week, although it didn't hold for too long.

ALEX MASHINSKY: Yeah, so earlier this year I talked about it kind of resisting going below $29,000 and we've seen a big jump since. And I think we are hitting some resistance here in the 40,000 to 45,000 levels. And there is not a lot of resistance above that. So I think we're going to consolidate here and then break to new highs. I still stand by my prediction that this year we will see anywhere between $140,000 and $160,000 per Bitcoin.

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ADAM SHAPIRO: I think there are a lot of people cheering what you just said. Your platform, Celsius, deals with so many people who we refer to as the unbanked. Are they going to be able to get in on this, they can via the platform can't they?

ALEX MASHINSKY: Yeah, so most of what we do is enable the average person to earn a yield on their digital assets. We have almost a million customers in 170 countries, just over $17 billion in assets in total assets and we generate yield, we pay 8.8% on Stablecoins for example. So that's 30 to 40 times more than your bank pays you and we pay 6.2% on your Bitcoin.

So what Celsius does better than anyone else is give you that yield, give you that return on your capital. And we do it in three buckets, one is again, Stablecoins, we have 12 different forms of Stablecoins, three different forms of gold. So you can now earn 5.5% gold on gold or you can venture and choose between 32 different digital assets like Bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin, and so on. Those are the unique things that Celsius does better than anyone else.

SEANA SMITH: What about the infrastructure bill because it does include new crypto regulations for revenue? I guess do you view this as a headwind or how big of a challenge could this potentially be to crypto going forward?

ALEX MASHINSKY: Look, for those of us who pay taxes and report all of our transactions nothing in that legislation is new or different. I think Treasury and some of the other departments are trying to make sure that they collect all the taxes that are due. And at Celsius, for example, you do get a 1099 at the end of the year that tells you exactly how much you earned in yield and you do have to pay taxes on that. So I don't see-- there's no impact to us and we've been following regulation, we've been doing KYC and AML services since 2017. So none of these new regulatory requirements make any difference. And I think clarity on the regulatory side is a very good thing, it's a positive.

Now I heard some people talk about mining and how it's going to impact mining. Celsius has over $200 million invested in mining. We're one of the largest miners in North America and I can tell you that this new regulation does not hamper or slow down any of our activities. We do have to report income, we're going to pay taxes on it. And we're happy to do it running a profitable business.

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Will Bitcoin Ever Run Out? – Yahoo Finance

Sheldon Cooper/SOPA Images/Shutterstock

Bitcoin has been around since 2009, but its only been the last few years where its been on the map of the average investor. Thats likely due to the fact that the price of Bitcoin has absolutely exploded. Even after dropping over 50% from its high in 2021, Bitcoin is still up over 250% over the last year, and over 32,500% since 2014. Whereas lots of investors have gotten excited over the prospect of becoming rich by investing in Bitcoin, not many people fully understand exactly what Bitcoin is or how it works. For example, you may have heard that the total number of Bitcoin allowed to exist is limited. But, how is that possible, and what does it mean? Will Bitcoin ever run out?

Check Out: What Is the Next Big Cryptocurrency To Explode in 2021?Consider: Is the Shiba Inu Coin the Cryptocurrency You Should Be Watching?

Heres a quick overview of how Bitcoin is produced, how it can be limited and what it all means for the future of the cryptocurrency.

While the mechanics of the operations can get a bit confusing, Bitcoin is produced by miners, but electronic miners rather than physical miners. The way it works is that Bitcoin miners record transactions on the blockchain, which is a decentralized ledger. To record a transaction, miners must solve complex algorithms using massive computer power. Once a transaction is recorded, which occurs about every 10 minutes on average, the miner is rewarded with Bitcoin. Currently, the reward for miners is 6.25 Bitcoin, but this amount is halved every four years. In 2009, when Bitcoin was first developed, the reward was 50 Bitcoin. Its estimated that the next halving will be in 2024, when the reward will drop to 3.125 Bitcoin.

Learn More: Where Does Cryptocurrency Come From?

Under the mining system, it might seem like there would be no limit to the amount of Bitcoin that could be produced. However, the way its source code is written, there can be no more Bitcoin produced once 21 million coins are in the system. The way the mining system is set up means that the final Bitcoin wont be mined until about 2140, however. So, although the production rate will slow, there will still be new Bitcoin coming online for over 100 years.

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See: If You Invested $1,000 in These Cryptocurrencies a Year Ago, Heres How Much Youd Have Now

Bitcoin will never run out, as there have already been over 18 million Bitcoin mined and there will ultimately be 21 million in the system. However, the introduction of new supply will eventually stop. This is one of the reasons Bitcoin bulls aggressively tout the cryptocurrency. In their opinion, increasing demand for Bitcoin will eventually overcome the limited supply, thereby driving up prices exponentially.

This could prove true, as more and more businesses and even countries are beginning to accept Bitcoin as a valid form of currency. El Salvador, for example, became the first country to accept Bitcoin as legal tender on June 9. However, the future demand for Bitcoin is still far from certain, which is part of the reason there are such wild swings in its price.

More From GOBankingRates

Last updated: July 29, 2021

This article originally appeared on GOBankingRates.com: Will Bitcoin Ever Run Out?

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