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Bitcoin Crime

UK Police Stumble Upon Bitcoin Mine While Looking For Cannabis Farm (bbc.com) 68

phalse phace shares a report from the BBC: A suspected Bitcoin "mining" operation illegally stealing electricity has been found by police who were searching for a cannabis farm. Officers had been tipped off about the site on the Great Bridge Industrial Estate, Sandwell, and raided it on May 18, West Midlands Police said. Instead of cannabis plants they found a bank of about 100 computer units. The force said the cryptocurrency "mine" had effectively stolen thousands of pounds of electricity. Inquiries with network operator Western Power Distribution found an illegal connection to the electricity supply.

Detectives said they were tipped off about lots of people visiting the unit throughout the day and a police drone picked up a lot of heat coming from the building. Sgt Jennifer Griffin said, given the signs, they had expected to find a cannabis farm. "It had all the hallmarks of a cannabis cultivation set-up and I believe it is only the second such crypto mine we have encountered in the West Midlands," she said. The computer equipment has been seized but no arrests have been made, the force said.

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UK Police Stumble Upon Bitcoin Mine While Looking For Cannabis Farm

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  • by ebcdic ( 39948 ) on Friday May 28, 2021 @07:16PM (#61432716)
    That's a lot of electricity.
  • by Antique Geekmeister ( 740220 ) on Friday May 28, 2021 @07:27PM (#61432748)

    Bitcoin mining on rootkit installed systems, and with stolen AWS credentials, is startlingly commonplace, It's not that AWS particularly encourages theft of credentials, but the poor security in far too many companies encourages it. It's particularly popular to activate from poorly secured administrative systems used for Kubernetes and Harness based deployments, which can easily set up entire VPC's that are isolated from casual access by the owners of the original account. It takes careful monitoring of bills and of active resources to even notice such abuse.

  • I'd rather have illegal bitcoin miners instead of illegal grow op. The grow ops tend to cause black mold and water damage while the mining operation should leave major headaches for the property owner / other residents.
    • what if the GPUs are stolen too? Then would you complain?

      • by mysidia ( 191772 )

        No GPUs unless they were mining something like Ether not bitcoin... Bitcoin miners use ASICs; GPUs simply don't have enough hashrate to do anything useful with on that blockchain.

    • I'd rather have illegal bitcoin miners instead of illegal grow op. The grow ops tend to cause black mold and water damage while the mining operation should leave major headaches for the property owner / other residents.

      The problem is that it's illegal, if you could grow it in a proper facility then people would do that.

  • Why on earth would anyone growing cannabis still be using power-intensive incandescent bulbs?

    Is there really any reason not to have switched to LED bulbs sometime during the last ten years? And if no one is still using incandescent bulbs, why are the police looking for them?

    And what kind of fool would steal thousands of pounds of power and not expect the power company to notice, thereby disrupting one's profitable mining operation?

    I expect there's more to the story than appears here.

    • The stolen energy is a small part of the overall consumption for an area. Probably losses due to poor insulation are greater than losses from theft. The heat emitted by growers and crypto miners can be detected by helicopter mounted infrared cameras and often leads the police to the offender.

      Now, how to hide waste heat...

      • Now, how to hide waste heat...
        By pumping it underground.

        The stolen energy is a small part of the overall consumption for an area.
        If you believe that, then good luck with your next "power stealing" endeavor.

        Probably losses due to poor insulation are greater than losses from theft.
        If you believe that, then good luck with your next "power project" in your house.

    • You seem not to realize what LED grow lamps consume, 480W per 4 foot square area. Two forty foot lines of those is 9.6 KW

    • Nobody in this story was growing cannabis so your questions are rather off topic.
    • by newcastlejon ( 1483695 ) on Friday May 28, 2021 @08:13PM (#61432828)

      Why on earth would anyone growing cannabis still be using power-intensive incandescent bulbs?

      They also serve to keep the crop warm. But also...

      Is there really any reason not to have switched to LED bulbs sometime during the last ten years? And if no one is still using incandescent bulbs, why are the police looking for them?

      The same reason that they're often found using sodium lamps pilfered from street lights: they steal them. They are criminals after all.

      And what kind of fool would steal thousands of pounds of power and not expect the power company to notice, thereby disrupting one's profitable mining operation?

      The electricity board would also think it suspicious it if they were paying for that amount of power in a small unit (especially if it ran 24/7), so they might as well steal it. Did I mention that they're criminals?

      I expect there's more to the story than appears here.

      No, not really.
      Disclaimer: I have a relative who accompanies the police on raids solely to safely disconnect the gerry-rigged electricity supplies.

      • Did I mention that they're criminals?
        BitCoin mining is not a crime/criminal.

        The only criminal thing was stealing power.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Why on earth would anyone growing cannabis still be using power-intensive incandescent bulbs?

      As the electricity was stolen, maybe it is some old equipment and they did not care? But you are right, the suspicion by the police was stupid. Not that this is any surprise.

  • "a police drone picked up a lot of heat coming from the building."
    With LED lighting, is there really enough heat produced to be detectable outside the building?

    • Re:Heat? (Score:4, Insightful)

      by iggymanz ( 596061 ) on Friday May 28, 2021 @07:54PM (#61432794)

      Yes, look up what those LED grow lamps consume. 4 x 10 foot panel of those is 4.8 KW.

      • Re:Heat? (Score:4, Informative)

        by Firethorn ( 177587 ) on Friday May 28, 2021 @08:08PM (#61432816) Homepage Journal

        To expand upon this: proper LED grow lights are optimized to emit the wavelengths ideal for the plants involved. But you're still fueling extensive chemical operations via photosynthesis.

        So you still need "most" of the energy of a full sunlit day. Most lighting inside a house is actually very dim compared to what the sun puts out, it's just that humans(like most animals) have adaptive vision so our eyes work just fine in much dimmer light, and we don't even notice after a moment of adaption.

        But plants are trying to grow using that energy, so they need as much of it as they can get. Enter relatively lots of power.

        • So you still need "most" of the energy of a full sunlit day. Most lighting inside a house is actually very dim compared to what the sun puts out, it's just that humans(like most animals) have adaptive vision so our eyes work just fine in much dimmer light, and we don't even notice after a moment of adaption.

          To put some numbers into this, the sunlight reaching ground has an intensity of about 1 kW/m^2. Of course that includes a lot of spectrum that is not needed for plant growth; on the other hand, even LED lighting is not super efficient. So it's easy to estimate you need a couple of kW of electricity to get the equivalent of a square metre under the sun.

      • Light that isn't converted by the plant bounces the grow tent around and is absorbed and turned into heat. It's better than sunlight because almost none of the output starts off as infrared, but conservation of energy is what it is.

    • 1) Just because it is less heat than other lighting sources doesn't necessarily mean there will be less heat "coming from" the building in the form of infrared radiation from the roof. This is because they likely used less ventilation fans than they would have with other light sources.

      2) The plants grow best in a warm environment. Grow operations aren't warm on account of not managing the waste heat from the lights. Typically there is a closed-loop controller connected to both the ventilation fans and a hea

  • voltage differentials. Thats just silly
  • These days a decent grow light for at least the type of indoor gardening that I'm used to (oregano and basil) is like 17-30 watts. Those bitcoin mining ASICs were upwards of 1000-3000 watts a piece. If police think they're still going to find grow houses based on electricity usage like in the incandescent and fluorescent days, they're living in the past. I'd almost suspect they were looking for a crypto mine on purpose actually.
    • They knew how much electricity was being stolen, and probably someone in the police force is capable of working out how much heat that translates to.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      The police is always backwards and a decade or so behind. It is are not the smartest or "finest" people available that want to do that job. Also, maybe these could have been _stupid_ weed growers using outdated equipment?

    • If you are running a grow house you will have banks of LED lighting. like it or not that generates excess heating and will absolutely be detectable for anyone doing industrial scale growing in their house without a lot of insulation to conceal it.
    • by catprog ( 849688 )

      I don't think they were looking for a crypto mine or a grow house.

      I think they found a area where a lot of heat was coming out of and though it was a grow house.

  • And crypto-miners even more so. It has been well known for at least a decade that the police in many countries is looking for places that consume unusually high amounts of electricity to find indoor weed-farms. Stealing the electricity may make this take a but longer to be found, but electricity does not simply vanish from the wires (unlike water, for example, which leaks).

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