> More realistically, "Chinese Miners" aren't the government.
I think that's largely the point, other comments are appealing that somehow the Chinese govt has a lot to lose by seizing control of bitcoin, but in reality they probably just have no reason to yet, it beggars belief that an authoritarian government would allow private citizens to control an important currency on their own soil. My own take is that they are letting it run because of the shadow of doubt it is casting on the USD.
> ASICs going to be on a plane and plugged into the Hoover Damn or Iceland's geothermals
A little simplistic to think non-negligible percentages of the hash pool would turn themselves off, relocate internationally, completely disrupt the difficulty rate, put themselves at a massive disadvantage and subject themselves to an unknown foreign government who might be completely hostile toward them.
More pertinently the CCP might "meddle" with their ability to fly out of the country as they have done with countless dissidents already.
I think that's largely the point, other comments are appealing that somehow the Chinese govt has a lot to lose by seizing control of bitcoin, but in reality they probably just have no reason to yet, it beggars belief that an authoritarian government would allow private citizens to control an important currency on their own soil. My own take is that they are letting it run because of the shadow of doubt it is casting on the USD.
> ASICs going to be on a plane and plugged into the Hoover Damn or Iceland's geothermals
A little simplistic to think non-negligible percentages of the hash pool would turn themselves off, relocate internationally, completely disrupt the difficulty rate, put themselves at a massive disadvantage and subject themselves to an unknown foreign government who might be completely hostile toward them. More pertinently the CCP might "meddle" with their ability to fly out of the country as they have done with countless dissidents already.