委内瑞拉矿工现状:挖矿合法,但需暗地进行
```json { "translatedTitle": "Current Situation of Venezuelan Miners: Mining is Legal, but Must Be Conducted in Secret", "translatedContent": "[This article was updated on July 10, 2020 at tuoniaox.com]\n\nAccording to news.bitcoin, Venezuelan military forces recently seized 315 Bitcoin mining rigs, Bitmain Antminer S9s, claiming that these devices were not registered in the country. Although cryptocurrency mining is legal in Venezuela, miners state that they face unfair treatment due to illegal seizures of mining equipment.\n\nThe Venezuelan Bolivarian National Guard (GNB) announced on Twitter on Monday that it had seized 315 Antminer S9 Bitcoin mining devices in the southern region of the country. The GNB is one of the largest divisions of the Bolivarian Armed Forces.\n\nThe tweet explained that the GNB decided to seize the Bitcoin mining equipment because the owners did not have proper registration documents. The case has been transferred to the National Superintendency of Crypto Assets and Related Activities (Sunacrip).\n\nAccording to local news media Criptonoticias, this is the first time Venezuelan authorities have confiscated mining equipment in 2020. Prior to this, in September 2019, the country confiscated some mining equipment in Aragua state due to lack of proper registration certificates.\n\nThe Venezuelan government has officially legalized cryptocurrency mining, requiring miners to register and obtain cryptocurrency mining certificates. However, cryptocurrency miners in the country have repeatedly stated that they have been illegally seized of mining equipment and extorted by police. Some cryptocurrency miners say that police officials demand bribes to ignore mining equipment they discover.\n\nVeteran cryptocurrency miner Joan Telo told news media that when calculating mining profitability in Venezuela, one must include extortion fees and losses from confiscated equipment. Although cryptocurrency mining is a legal activity, he added that \"it must be conducted secretly, and once discovered by authorities, one should consider the inherent costs of moving the entire operation to another location.\"\n\n==\nReceive the latest market information simultaneously with 110,000 people\nSearch \"Ostrich Blockchain\" to download\nJoin the Ostrich community with 20,000 people\nAdd WeChat ID: tuoniao02\nThis article is originally certified by \"Yuanben\", author Ostrich Blockchain, visit yuanben.io to query [1T4XSS5U] for authorization information.\n\n---\nWith editor-in-chief authorization, all content from tuoniaox.com has been migrated to hashspring.com, and will continue to be published on hashspring.com going forward." } ```
```json
{
"translatedTitle": "Current Situation of Venezuelan Miners: Mining is Legal, but Must Be Conducted in Secret",
"translatedContent": "[This article was updated on July 10, 2020 at tuoniaox.com]\n\nAccording to news.bitcoin, Venezuelan military forces recently seized 315 Bitcoin mining rigs, Bitmain Antminer S9s, claiming that these devices were not registered in the country. Although cryptocurrency mining is legal in Venezuela, miners state that they face unfair treatment due to illegal seizures of mining equipment.\n\nThe Venezuelan Bolivarian National Guard (GNB) announced on Twitter on Monday that it had seized 315 Antminer S9 Bitcoin mining devices in the southern region of the country. The GNB is one of the largest divisions of the Bolivarian Armed Forces.\n\nThe tweet explained that the GNB decided to seize the Bitcoin mining equipment because the owners did not have proper registration documents. The case has been transferred to the National Superintendency of Crypto Assets and Related Activities (Sunacrip).\n\nAccording to local news media Criptonoticias, this is the first time Venezuelan authorities have confiscated mining equipment in 2020. Prior to this, in September 2019, the country confiscated some mining equipment in Aragua state due to lack of proper registration certificates.\n\nThe Venezuelan government has officially legalized cryptocurrency mining, requiring miners to register and obtain cryptocurrency mining certificates. However, cryptocurrency miners in the country have repeatedly stated that they have been illegally seized of mining equipment and extorted by police. Some cryptocurrency miners say that police officials demand bribes to ignore mining equipment they discover.\n\nVeteran cryptocurrency miner Joan Telo told news media that when calculating mining profitability in Venezuela, one must include extortion fees and losses from confiscated equipment. Although cryptocurrency mining is a legal activity, he added that \"it must be conducted secretly, and once discovered by authorities, one should consider the inherent costs of moving the entire operation to another location.\"\n\n==\nReceive the latest market information simultaneously with 110,000 people\nSearch \"Ostrich Blockchain\" to download\nJoin the Ostrich community with 20,000 people\nAdd WeChat ID: tuoniao02\nThis article is originally certified by \"Yuanben\", author Ostrich Blockchain, visit yuanben.io to query [1T4XSS5U] for authorization information.\n\n---\nWith editor-in-chief authorization, all content from tuoniaox.com has been migrated to hashspring.com, and will continue to be published on hashspring.com going forward."
}
```