https://www.wired.com/story/kazakhstan-cryptocurrency-mining-unrest-energy/

"When Denis Rusinovich set up cryptocurrency mining company Maveric Group in 
Kazakhstan in 2017, he thought he had hit the jackpot. Next door to China and 
Russia, the country had everything a Bitcoin miner could ask for: a cold 
climate, legions of old warehouses and factories where the mining rigs could be 
installed, and—especially—dirt cheap energy to power the electricity-guzzling 
process through which cryptocurrency is minted.

“That was a good opportunity,” Rusinovich says. When China outlawed 
cryptocurrency mining overnight last June, many miners based in the 
country—which at the time made up between 60 and 70 percent of Bitcoin’s mining 
network—made the same call and hastily relocated to Kazakhstan, bringing to the 
country as many as 87,849 mining machines, according to a Financial Times 
estimate. Less than a year later, the initial buzz is history: Miners are now 
being confronted with frozen machines, popular unrest, and Russian troops 
roaming across the country. And leaving is not an option.

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