Is it okay to mine cryptocurrency with a company machine if I am a part timer?












1














I was provided a decently powerful mac book pro valued at $2000 and was wondering if it would be okay if I mined cryptocurrency when I brought the laptop home.



Should I be concerned about any consequences, I believe I'm smart enough to turn it off when I go to work.



Also was reading up on https://www.securitynow.com/author.asp?section_id=613&doc_id=740382



and it seems like more and more people are abusing company resources to mine crypto.



There are people who use the company computers as personal computers as well.



I'm only working a few hours per week.



Hmm, decided not to mine bitcoin via argubly unsuited macbook.



Edit: Alibaba cloud was confusing to configure to set up low end mining










share|improve this question




















  • 11




    Short Answer: No
    – bruglesco
    2 hours ago










  • What makes you think you would own any cryptocurrency mined on company computers?
    – Dan Pichelman
    2 hours ago










  • Sent to my personal address, if I don't own it, I control it.
    – GrandFleet
    2 hours ago








  • 1




    Is mining crypto ethical even before factoring in whose computer it's on?
    – Sidney
    1 hour ago






  • 1




    @GrandFleet Your last comment indicates that you're interested in flat out stealing something that you acknowledge you don't legally own, mined with equipment you don't also own but are abusing (your word!). The type of cryptocurrency you would like to mine is totally irrelevant to these details. Are you honestly asking if any part of this is acceptable, or are you simply trying to gauge (and improve) your chances of getting away with it?
    – Upper_Case
    42 mins ago
















1














I was provided a decently powerful mac book pro valued at $2000 and was wondering if it would be okay if I mined cryptocurrency when I brought the laptop home.



Should I be concerned about any consequences, I believe I'm smart enough to turn it off when I go to work.



Also was reading up on https://www.securitynow.com/author.asp?section_id=613&doc_id=740382



and it seems like more and more people are abusing company resources to mine crypto.



There are people who use the company computers as personal computers as well.



I'm only working a few hours per week.



Hmm, decided not to mine bitcoin via argubly unsuited macbook.



Edit: Alibaba cloud was confusing to configure to set up low end mining










share|improve this question




















  • 11




    Short Answer: No
    – bruglesco
    2 hours ago










  • What makes you think you would own any cryptocurrency mined on company computers?
    – Dan Pichelman
    2 hours ago










  • Sent to my personal address, if I don't own it, I control it.
    – GrandFleet
    2 hours ago








  • 1




    Is mining crypto ethical even before factoring in whose computer it's on?
    – Sidney
    1 hour ago






  • 1




    @GrandFleet Your last comment indicates that you're interested in flat out stealing something that you acknowledge you don't legally own, mined with equipment you don't also own but are abusing (your word!). The type of cryptocurrency you would like to mine is totally irrelevant to these details. Are you honestly asking if any part of this is acceptable, or are you simply trying to gauge (and improve) your chances of getting away with it?
    – Upper_Case
    42 mins ago














1












1








1







I was provided a decently powerful mac book pro valued at $2000 and was wondering if it would be okay if I mined cryptocurrency when I brought the laptop home.



Should I be concerned about any consequences, I believe I'm smart enough to turn it off when I go to work.



Also was reading up on https://www.securitynow.com/author.asp?section_id=613&doc_id=740382



and it seems like more and more people are abusing company resources to mine crypto.



There are people who use the company computers as personal computers as well.



I'm only working a few hours per week.



Hmm, decided not to mine bitcoin via argubly unsuited macbook.



Edit: Alibaba cloud was confusing to configure to set up low end mining










share|improve this question















I was provided a decently powerful mac book pro valued at $2000 and was wondering if it would be okay if I mined cryptocurrency when I brought the laptop home.



Should I be concerned about any consequences, I believe I'm smart enough to turn it off when I go to work.



Also was reading up on https://www.securitynow.com/author.asp?section_id=613&doc_id=740382



and it seems like more and more people are abusing company resources to mine crypto.



There are people who use the company computers as personal computers as well.



I'm only working a few hours per week.



Hmm, decided not to mine bitcoin via argubly unsuited macbook.



Edit: Alibaba cloud was confusing to configure to set up low end mining







ethics canada






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 49 mins ago

























asked 2 hours ago









GrandFleet

3799




3799








  • 11




    Short Answer: No
    – bruglesco
    2 hours ago










  • What makes you think you would own any cryptocurrency mined on company computers?
    – Dan Pichelman
    2 hours ago










  • Sent to my personal address, if I don't own it, I control it.
    – GrandFleet
    2 hours ago








  • 1




    Is mining crypto ethical even before factoring in whose computer it's on?
    – Sidney
    1 hour ago






  • 1




    @GrandFleet Your last comment indicates that you're interested in flat out stealing something that you acknowledge you don't legally own, mined with equipment you don't also own but are abusing (your word!). The type of cryptocurrency you would like to mine is totally irrelevant to these details. Are you honestly asking if any part of this is acceptable, or are you simply trying to gauge (and improve) your chances of getting away with it?
    – Upper_Case
    42 mins ago














  • 11




    Short Answer: No
    – bruglesco
    2 hours ago










  • What makes you think you would own any cryptocurrency mined on company computers?
    – Dan Pichelman
    2 hours ago










  • Sent to my personal address, if I don't own it, I control it.
    – GrandFleet
    2 hours ago








  • 1




    Is mining crypto ethical even before factoring in whose computer it's on?
    – Sidney
    1 hour ago






  • 1




    @GrandFleet Your last comment indicates that you're interested in flat out stealing something that you acknowledge you don't legally own, mined with equipment you don't also own but are abusing (your word!). The type of cryptocurrency you would like to mine is totally irrelevant to these details. Are you honestly asking if any part of this is acceptable, or are you simply trying to gauge (and improve) your chances of getting away with it?
    – Upper_Case
    42 mins ago








11




11




Short Answer: No
– bruglesco
2 hours ago




Short Answer: No
– bruglesco
2 hours ago












What makes you think you would own any cryptocurrency mined on company computers?
– Dan Pichelman
2 hours ago




What makes you think you would own any cryptocurrency mined on company computers?
– Dan Pichelman
2 hours ago












Sent to my personal address, if I don't own it, I control it.
– GrandFleet
2 hours ago






Sent to my personal address, if I don't own it, I control it.
– GrandFleet
2 hours ago






1




1




Is mining crypto ethical even before factoring in whose computer it's on?
– Sidney
1 hour ago




Is mining crypto ethical even before factoring in whose computer it's on?
– Sidney
1 hour ago




1




1




@GrandFleet Your last comment indicates that you're interested in flat out stealing something that you acknowledge you don't legally own, mined with equipment you don't also own but are abusing (your word!). The type of cryptocurrency you would like to mine is totally irrelevant to these details. Are you honestly asking if any part of this is acceptable, or are you simply trying to gauge (and improve) your chances of getting away with it?
– Upper_Case
42 mins ago




@GrandFleet Your last comment indicates that you're interested in flat out stealing something that you acknowledge you don't legally own, mined with equipment you don't also own but are abusing (your word!). The type of cryptocurrency you would like to mine is totally irrelevant to these details. Are you honestly asking if any part of this is acceptable, or are you simply trying to gauge (and improve) your chances of getting away with it?
– Upper_Case
42 mins ago










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes


















7














The obvious and easy way to know if it's OK to do this is to ask your boss for permission first.



If she says it's OK, then go for it. If she says 'no' or you're afraid to ask, then you have your answer.



Just because you think you can get away with it doesn't make it right.






share|improve this answer

















  • 2




    Should also check contract and any company policy. If boss's response goes against them, OP will likely still be held accountable for things they should have been aware of.
    – cdkMoose
    1 hour ago






  • 1




    This is, of course, the correct approach. However, be aware that raising this with your boss may alert them to your coworkers' practices if they didn't already know, which might result in an explicit banning of this practice across the board. You might find yourself suddenly rather unpopular with your colleagues.
    – Jane S
    1 hour ago





















19














No it's not OK. And just because others are doing it, possibly many per your link, doesn't make it OK.



The machine belongs to your employer and should only be used for their purposes. You are risking viruses, getting hacked and exposure of company information on their equipment and are adding wear and tear for something that has no value to them.



If you want to mine crypto-currency or do anything else that is solely for your personal value, get your own computer.



Also, the number of hours you are working for them has nothing to do with whether this is right or wrong.






share|improve this answer

















  • 3




    Many people are really tempted to do things they shouldn't, and then they get caught. If you used their machine to mine, I could see some jurisdictions allowing them to take the mined currency away from you.
    – cdkMoose
    2 hours ago






  • 3




    Personally, I wouldn't trust you if I found out you were doing this with company equipment. Would make me wonder what else you are doing.
    – cdkMoose
    2 hours ago






  • 3




    @GrandFleet - I think it's sweet that you think that mining crypto on company property isn't misconduct
    – Richard
    2 hours ago






  • 3




    I wouldn't be so sure about that. Many companies with IT departments run software audits on laptops when they reconnect to the corporate network. They do this for licensing checks and to make sure you have appropriate security upgrades. Along the way they would detect unauthorized software and for many companies this is a fire-able offense. Check your contract.
    – cdkMoose
    2 hours ago






  • 6




    @Grandfleet You asked for advice, it has universally been, "Don't do this." Your very first response to that was, "But I want to!" It's your choice to ignore the advice from many experienced people who tell you it's a bad idea, but don't say you haven't been warned if it goes wrong. Just because you don't like the advice, it doesn't make it wrong.
    – Jane S
    2 hours ago





















2














The chances of being fired immediately if/when this is found out are approximately 100%.



The chances of you making money with this scheme are about zero, unless you manage to steal electricity as well. The price of one bitcoin currently is so low that you may just about break even, taking into account electricity consumption, if you do this in a country with cheap electricity and with highly specialised hardware. Your MacBook and it's graphics card are not such highly specialised hardware, and your country doesn't provide electricity that cheaply.



And there's some guy in China right now in jail because he did that at his school, costing his school thousands of dollars in electricity; quite widely reported.






share|improve this answer























  • I said before I'm not mining bitcoin, geez.
    – GrandFleet
    51 mins ago



















-4














"Sure it is."



Everything you mine is in that case company property of course.



The fact that you have to ask, should already show you it is



NOT OK.



You do realize, they may legally log everything you do with that machine...



Also, when in doubt get legal counsel or ask your employer, I'm sure they'll love to tell you how OK it is to pocket money created with property of your employer.



EDIT:

oh please explain downvotes, I dare you...






share|improve this answer























  • To take a guess at the down vote given to you, the first bolded words here might be why. That or since the question is tagged Canada your answer may not be factually correct. I didn't cast a vote here, but couldn't resist the dare.
    – David S
    56 mins ago











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4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes








4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









7














The obvious and easy way to know if it's OK to do this is to ask your boss for permission first.



If she says it's OK, then go for it. If she says 'no' or you're afraid to ask, then you have your answer.



Just because you think you can get away with it doesn't make it right.






share|improve this answer

















  • 2




    Should also check contract and any company policy. If boss's response goes against them, OP will likely still be held accountable for things they should have been aware of.
    – cdkMoose
    1 hour ago






  • 1




    This is, of course, the correct approach. However, be aware that raising this with your boss may alert them to your coworkers' practices if they didn't already know, which might result in an explicit banning of this practice across the board. You might find yourself suddenly rather unpopular with your colleagues.
    – Jane S
    1 hour ago


















7














The obvious and easy way to know if it's OK to do this is to ask your boss for permission first.



If she says it's OK, then go for it. If she says 'no' or you're afraid to ask, then you have your answer.



Just because you think you can get away with it doesn't make it right.






share|improve this answer

















  • 2




    Should also check contract and any company policy. If boss's response goes against them, OP will likely still be held accountable for things they should have been aware of.
    – cdkMoose
    1 hour ago






  • 1




    This is, of course, the correct approach. However, be aware that raising this with your boss may alert them to your coworkers' practices if they didn't already know, which might result in an explicit banning of this practice across the board. You might find yourself suddenly rather unpopular with your colleagues.
    – Jane S
    1 hour ago
















7












7








7






The obvious and easy way to know if it's OK to do this is to ask your boss for permission first.



If she says it's OK, then go for it. If she says 'no' or you're afraid to ask, then you have your answer.



Just because you think you can get away with it doesn't make it right.






share|improve this answer












The obvious and easy way to know if it's OK to do this is to ask your boss for permission first.



If she says it's OK, then go for it. If she says 'no' or you're afraid to ask, then you have your answer.



Just because you think you can get away with it doesn't make it right.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 1 hour ago









Dan Pichelman

27k137488




27k137488








  • 2




    Should also check contract and any company policy. If boss's response goes against them, OP will likely still be held accountable for things they should have been aware of.
    – cdkMoose
    1 hour ago






  • 1




    This is, of course, the correct approach. However, be aware that raising this with your boss may alert them to your coworkers' practices if they didn't already know, which might result in an explicit banning of this practice across the board. You might find yourself suddenly rather unpopular with your colleagues.
    – Jane S
    1 hour ago
















  • 2




    Should also check contract and any company policy. If boss's response goes against them, OP will likely still be held accountable for things they should have been aware of.
    – cdkMoose
    1 hour ago






  • 1




    This is, of course, the correct approach. However, be aware that raising this with your boss may alert them to your coworkers' practices if they didn't already know, which might result in an explicit banning of this practice across the board. You might find yourself suddenly rather unpopular with your colleagues.
    – Jane S
    1 hour ago










2




2




Should also check contract and any company policy. If boss's response goes against them, OP will likely still be held accountable for things they should have been aware of.
– cdkMoose
1 hour ago




Should also check contract and any company policy. If boss's response goes against them, OP will likely still be held accountable for things they should have been aware of.
– cdkMoose
1 hour ago




1




1




This is, of course, the correct approach. However, be aware that raising this with your boss may alert them to your coworkers' practices if they didn't already know, which might result in an explicit banning of this practice across the board. You might find yourself suddenly rather unpopular with your colleagues.
– Jane S
1 hour ago






This is, of course, the correct approach. However, be aware that raising this with your boss may alert them to your coworkers' practices if they didn't already know, which might result in an explicit banning of this practice across the board. You might find yourself suddenly rather unpopular with your colleagues.
– Jane S
1 hour ago















19














No it's not OK. And just because others are doing it, possibly many per your link, doesn't make it OK.



The machine belongs to your employer and should only be used for their purposes. You are risking viruses, getting hacked and exposure of company information on their equipment and are adding wear and tear for something that has no value to them.



If you want to mine crypto-currency or do anything else that is solely for your personal value, get your own computer.



Also, the number of hours you are working for them has nothing to do with whether this is right or wrong.






share|improve this answer

















  • 3




    Many people are really tempted to do things they shouldn't, and then they get caught. If you used their machine to mine, I could see some jurisdictions allowing them to take the mined currency away from you.
    – cdkMoose
    2 hours ago






  • 3




    Personally, I wouldn't trust you if I found out you were doing this with company equipment. Would make me wonder what else you are doing.
    – cdkMoose
    2 hours ago






  • 3




    @GrandFleet - I think it's sweet that you think that mining crypto on company property isn't misconduct
    – Richard
    2 hours ago






  • 3




    I wouldn't be so sure about that. Many companies with IT departments run software audits on laptops when they reconnect to the corporate network. They do this for licensing checks and to make sure you have appropriate security upgrades. Along the way they would detect unauthorized software and for many companies this is a fire-able offense. Check your contract.
    – cdkMoose
    2 hours ago






  • 6




    @Grandfleet You asked for advice, it has universally been, "Don't do this." Your very first response to that was, "But I want to!" It's your choice to ignore the advice from many experienced people who tell you it's a bad idea, but don't say you haven't been warned if it goes wrong. Just because you don't like the advice, it doesn't make it wrong.
    – Jane S
    2 hours ago


















19














No it's not OK. And just because others are doing it, possibly many per your link, doesn't make it OK.



The machine belongs to your employer and should only be used for their purposes. You are risking viruses, getting hacked and exposure of company information on their equipment and are adding wear and tear for something that has no value to them.



If you want to mine crypto-currency or do anything else that is solely for your personal value, get your own computer.



Also, the number of hours you are working for them has nothing to do with whether this is right or wrong.






share|improve this answer

















  • 3




    Many people are really tempted to do things they shouldn't, and then they get caught. If you used their machine to mine, I could see some jurisdictions allowing them to take the mined currency away from you.
    – cdkMoose
    2 hours ago






  • 3




    Personally, I wouldn't trust you if I found out you were doing this with company equipment. Would make me wonder what else you are doing.
    – cdkMoose
    2 hours ago






  • 3




    @GrandFleet - I think it's sweet that you think that mining crypto on company property isn't misconduct
    – Richard
    2 hours ago






  • 3




    I wouldn't be so sure about that. Many companies with IT departments run software audits on laptops when they reconnect to the corporate network. They do this for licensing checks and to make sure you have appropriate security upgrades. Along the way they would detect unauthorized software and for many companies this is a fire-able offense. Check your contract.
    – cdkMoose
    2 hours ago






  • 6




    @Grandfleet You asked for advice, it has universally been, "Don't do this." Your very first response to that was, "But I want to!" It's your choice to ignore the advice from many experienced people who tell you it's a bad idea, but don't say you haven't been warned if it goes wrong. Just because you don't like the advice, it doesn't make it wrong.
    – Jane S
    2 hours ago
















19












19








19






No it's not OK. And just because others are doing it, possibly many per your link, doesn't make it OK.



The machine belongs to your employer and should only be used for their purposes. You are risking viruses, getting hacked and exposure of company information on their equipment and are adding wear and tear for something that has no value to them.



If you want to mine crypto-currency or do anything else that is solely for your personal value, get your own computer.



Also, the number of hours you are working for them has nothing to do with whether this is right or wrong.






share|improve this answer












No it's not OK. And just because others are doing it, possibly many per your link, doesn't make it OK.



The machine belongs to your employer and should only be used for their purposes. You are risking viruses, getting hacked and exposure of company information on their equipment and are adding wear and tear for something that has no value to them.



If you want to mine crypto-currency or do anything else that is solely for your personal value, get your own computer.



Also, the number of hours you are working for them has nothing to do with whether this is right or wrong.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 2 hours ago









cdkMoose

10.6k22147




10.6k22147








  • 3




    Many people are really tempted to do things they shouldn't, and then they get caught. If you used their machine to mine, I could see some jurisdictions allowing them to take the mined currency away from you.
    – cdkMoose
    2 hours ago






  • 3




    Personally, I wouldn't trust you if I found out you were doing this with company equipment. Would make me wonder what else you are doing.
    – cdkMoose
    2 hours ago






  • 3




    @GrandFleet - I think it's sweet that you think that mining crypto on company property isn't misconduct
    – Richard
    2 hours ago






  • 3




    I wouldn't be so sure about that. Many companies with IT departments run software audits on laptops when they reconnect to the corporate network. They do this for licensing checks and to make sure you have appropriate security upgrades. Along the way they would detect unauthorized software and for many companies this is a fire-able offense. Check your contract.
    – cdkMoose
    2 hours ago






  • 6




    @Grandfleet You asked for advice, it has universally been, "Don't do this." Your very first response to that was, "But I want to!" It's your choice to ignore the advice from many experienced people who tell you it's a bad idea, but don't say you haven't been warned if it goes wrong. Just because you don't like the advice, it doesn't make it wrong.
    – Jane S
    2 hours ago
















  • 3




    Many people are really tempted to do things they shouldn't, and then they get caught. If you used their machine to mine, I could see some jurisdictions allowing them to take the mined currency away from you.
    – cdkMoose
    2 hours ago






  • 3




    Personally, I wouldn't trust you if I found out you were doing this with company equipment. Would make me wonder what else you are doing.
    – cdkMoose
    2 hours ago






  • 3




    @GrandFleet - I think it's sweet that you think that mining crypto on company property isn't misconduct
    – Richard
    2 hours ago






  • 3




    I wouldn't be so sure about that. Many companies with IT departments run software audits on laptops when they reconnect to the corporate network. They do this for licensing checks and to make sure you have appropriate security upgrades. Along the way they would detect unauthorized software and for many companies this is a fire-able offense. Check your contract.
    – cdkMoose
    2 hours ago






  • 6




    @Grandfleet You asked for advice, it has universally been, "Don't do this." Your very first response to that was, "But I want to!" It's your choice to ignore the advice from many experienced people who tell you it's a bad idea, but don't say you haven't been warned if it goes wrong. Just because you don't like the advice, it doesn't make it wrong.
    – Jane S
    2 hours ago










3




3




Many people are really tempted to do things they shouldn't, and then they get caught. If you used their machine to mine, I could see some jurisdictions allowing them to take the mined currency away from you.
– cdkMoose
2 hours ago




Many people are really tempted to do things they shouldn't, and then they get caught. If you used their machine to mine, I could see some jurisdictions allowing them to take the mined currency away from you.
– cdkMoose
2 hours ago




3




3




Personally, I wouldn't trust you if I found out you were doing this with company equipment. Would make me wonder what else you are doing.
– cdkMoose
2 hours ago




Personally, I wouldn't trust you if I found out you were doing this with company equipment. Would make me wonder what else you are doing.
– cdkMoose
2 hours ago




3




3




@GrandFleet - I think it's sweet that you think that mining crypto on company property isn't misconduct
– Richard
2 hours ago




@GrandFleet - I think it's sweet that you think that mining crypto on company property isn't misconduct
– Richard
2 hours ago




3




3




I wouldn't be so sure about that. Many companies with IT departments run software audits on laptops when they reconnect to the corporate network. They do this for licensing checks and to make sure you have appropriate security upgrades. Along the way they would detect unauthorized software and for many companies this is a fire-able offense. Check your contract.
– cdkMoose
2 hours ago




I wouldn't be so sure about that. Many companies with IT departments run software audits on laptops when they reconnect to the corporate network. They do this for licensing checks and to make sure you have appropriate security upgrades. Along the way they would detect unauthorized software and for many companies this is a fire-able offense. Check your contract.
– cdkMoose
2 hours ago




6




6




@Grandfleet You asked for advice, it has universally been, "Don't do this." Your very first response to that was, "But I want to!" It's your choice to ignore the advice from many experienced people who tell you it's a bad idea, but don't say you haven't been warned if it goes wrong. Just because you don't like the advice, it doesn't make it wrong.
– Jane S
2 hours ago






@Grandfleet You asked for advice, it has universally been, "Don't do this." Your very first response to that was, "But I want to!" It's your choice to ignore the advice from many experienced people who tell you it's a bad idea, but don't say you haven't been warned if it goes wrong. Just because you don't like the advice, it doesn't make it wrong.
– Jane S
2 hours ago













2














The chances of being fired immediately if/when this is found out are approximately 100%.



The chances of you making money with this scheme are about zero, unless you manage to steal electricity as well. The price of one bitcoin currently is so low that you may just about break even, taking into account electricity consumption, if you do this in a country with cheap electricity and with highly specialised hardware. Your MacBook and it's graphics card are not such highly specialised hardware, and your country doesn't provide electricity that cheaply.



And there's some guy in China right now in jail because he did that at his school, costing his school thousands of dollars in electricity; quite widely reported.






share|improve this answer























  • I said before I'm not mining bitcoin, geez.
    – GrandFleet
    51 mins ago
















2














The chances of being fired immediately if/when this is found out are approximately 100%.



The chances of you making money with this scheme are about zero, unless you manage to steal electricity as well. The price of one bitcoin currently is so low that you may just about break even, taking into account electricity consumption, if you do this in a country with cheap electricity and with highly specialised hardware. Your MacBook and it's graphics card are not such highly specialised hardware, and your country doesn't provide electricity that cheaply.



And there's some guy in China right now in jail because he did that at his school, costing his school thousands of dollars in electricity; quite widely reported.






share|improve this answer























  • I said before I'm not mining bitcoin, geez.
    – GrandFleet
    51 mins ago














2












2








2






The chances of being fired immediately if/when this is found out are approximately 100%.



The chances of you making money with this scheme are about zero, unless you manage to steal electricity as well. The price of one bitcoin currently is so low that you may just about break even, taking into account electricity consumption, if you do this in a country with cheap electricity and with highly specialised hardware. Your MacBook and it's graphics card are not such highly specialised hardware, and your country doesn't provide electricity that cheaply.



And there's some guy in China right now in jail because he did that at his school, costing his school thousands of dollars in electricity; quite widely reported.






share|improve this answer














The chances of being fired immediately if/when this is found out are approximately 100%.



The chances of you making money with this scheme are about zero, unless you manage to steal electricity as well. The price of one bitcoin currently is so low that you may just about break even, taking into account electricity consumption, if you do this in a country with cheap electricity and with highly specialised hardware. Your MacBook and it's graphics card are not such highly specialised hardware, and your country doesn't provide electricity that cheaply.



And there's some guy in China right now in jail because he did that at his school, costing his school thousands of dollars in electricity; quite widely reported.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 1 hour ago

























answered 1 hour ago









gnasher729

82.4k36148263




82.4k36148263












  • I said before I'm not mining bitcoin, geez.
    – GrandFleet
    51 mins ago


















  • I said before I'm not mining bitcoin, geez.
    – GrandFleet
    51 mins ago
















I said before I'm not mining bitcoin, geez.
– GrandFleet
51 mins ago




I said before I'm not mining bitcoin, geez.
– GrandFleet
51 mins ago











-4














"Sure it is."



Everything you mine is in that case company property of course.



The fact that you have to ask, should already show you it is



NOT OK.



You do realize, they may legally log everything you do with that machine...



Also, when in doubt get legal counsel or ask your employer, I'm sure they'll love to tell you how OK it is to pocket money created with property of your employer.



EDIT:

oh please explain downvotes, I dare you...






share|improve this answer























  • To take a guess at the down vote given to you, the first bolded words here might be why. That or since the question is tagged Canada your answer may not be factually correct. I didn't cast a vote here, but couldn't resist the dare.
    – David S
    56 mins ago
















-4














"Sure it is."



Everything you mine is in that case company property of course.



The fact that you have to ask, should already show you it is



NOT OK.



You do realize, they may legally log everything you do with that machine...



Also, when in doubt get legal counsel or ask your employer, I'm sure they'll love to tell you how OK it is to pocket money created with property of your employer.



EDIT:

oh please explain downvotes, I dare you...






share|improve this answer























  • To take a guess at the down vote given to you, the first bolded words here might be why. That or since the question is tagged Canada your answer may not be factually correct. I didn't cast a vote here, but couldn't resist the dare.
    – David S
    56 mins ago














-4












-4








-4






"Sure it is."



Everything you mine is in that case company property of course.



The fact that you have to ask, should already show you it is



NOT OK.



You do realize, they may legally log everything you do with that machine...



Also, when in doubt get legal counsel or ask your employer, I'm sure they'll love to tell you how OK it is to pocket money created with property of your employer.



EDIT:

oh please explain downvotes, I dare you...






share|improve this answer














"Sure it is."



Everything you mine is in that case company property of course.



The fact that you have to ask, should already show you it is



NOT OK.



You do realize, they may legally log everything you do with that machine...



Also, when in doubt get legal counsel or ask your employer, I'm sure they'll love to tell you how OK it is to pocket money created with property of your employer.



EDIT:

oh please explain downvotes, I dare you...







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited 1 hour ago

























answered 1 hour ago









DigitalBlade969

4,6921420




4,6921420












  • To take a guess at the down vote given to you, the first bolded words here might be why. That or since the question is tagged Canada your answer may not be factually correct. I didn't cast a vote here, but couldn't resist the dare.
    – David S
    56 mins ago


















  • To take a guess at the down vote given to you, the first bolded words here might be why. That or since the question is tagged Canada your answer may not be factually correct. I didn't cast a vote here, but couldn't resist the dare.
    – David S
    56 mins ago
















To take a guess at the down vote given to you, the first bolded words here might be why. That or since the question is tagged Canada your answer may not be factually correct. I didn't cast a vote here, but couldn't resist the dare.
– David S
56 mins ago




To take a guess at the down vote given to you, the first bolded words here might be why. That or since the question is tagged Canada your answer may not be factually correct. I didn't cast a vote here, but couldn't resist the dare.
– David S
56 mins ago


















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