The past week or so has seen talk of a new Bitcoin mining pool, based in China, making waves within the mining industry. Out of nowhere, in what is already a highly competitive market, Lubian has popped up to become the seventh-largest pool.
Data shows that they are responsible for processing almost of Bitcoin blocks. But what’s particularly unusual is the short amount of time in which they have achieved this feat. Already, Lubian has pipped Huobi-pool, the mining arm of the fourth largest crypto exchange, which has been around since . And more astonishingly, Lubian has gained significant ground over Binance Pool, which went live at the .Bitcoin Halving Sees Changes to Mining Dynamics
As the dust settles on the halving we have already since seen significant changes to Bitcoin mining dynamics, and how this impacts the rest of the industry.To begin with, following the cut in block rewards, the has taken a hit, as unprofitable miners are forced to switch their rigs off.
What’s more, this has led to a greater concentration of miners, which in turn has led to more congestion on the Bitcoin network.Lubian Enters The Fray
Nonetheless, that hasn’t stopped the rise of Lubian, as it attempts to muscle in on Bitcoin mining. A look at their shows they were responsible for mining 56 blocks last week with a hash rate of 6.44 EH/s. In comparison, the lead pool, F2Pool, did 163 blocks and had a hash rate of 18.74 EH/s. As impressive as that is, especially for a newcomer, details on who’s behind this operation are thin on the ground. A look at their shows nothing remarkable, which only intensifies the mystery.If I were to really try to crack the lubian case I'd start here, by contacting this domain name broker — Matthew Graham (@mattyryze)What’s more, Lubian’s rise suggests that the firm may have a hidden advantage over other pools. One possibility is that Lubian is using new mining hardware, which the other pools have yet to become aware of. While this is pure speculation at the moment, how else can their mining efficiency be explained? This turn of events comes as the market leader in mining equipment, Bitmain, suffered another embarrassment. Just two weeks ago, the power struggle between Jihan Wu and Micree Zhan spilled over into a public spat which involved robbing a business license in a Beijing government office.
The whole story (Jesus I still can’t believe 😂😂😂😂 In the morning, Micree was at the Industry and Commerce Bureau of Beijing office, to get his Beijing Bitmain corp license, which he is the legal representative of LIU and ten others literally “robbed” it right on the spot — Dovey "Rug the fiat" Wan (hiring) (@DoveyWan)With so much turmoil at Bitmain, it’s clear that the company’s focus is not on product innovation. Meaning now is as good a time as any for competitors to steal a march.