MyCointainer: Earning Money Online with Cryptocurrency Has Never Been Easier. – Yahoo Finance

HARJU MAAKOND, ESTONIA / ACCESSWIRE / May 13, 2020 / Have you ever heard of digital nomads? Well, you might as well do now as you could be on the road to becoming one of them. These are people who earn money online in one way or another, and it provides them with great convenience and flexibility to work anywhere, travel anytime, or pursue side projects.

Earning money online is a billion-dollar industry, and there is certainly a space for you and a sure way to do it. Keep in mind that this is regardless of whether you are looking to complement your income, diversify your online services portfolio, or fully immerse yourself and ultimately make it your primary source of income.

You can make money in many different ways, including through writing, product testing, marketing, and advertising, betting, investing, online surveys, the list simply goes on and on. These are well-covered topics, and you can easily find information about them all over the internet.

In this guide, however, we're going to talk about how you can make money online with cryptocurrencies. You can do this through affiliate marketing and the simplest form of passive and lucrative cryptocurrency investments in a single platform, the MyContianner.com.

Become a Digital Crypto Nomad

You probably know about Bitcoin, the first and most popular cryptocurrency in the world. Simply put, cryptocurrencies are digital assets or currencies that can be sent or received over a peer to peer network during a transaction.

People shy away from crypto for various reasons, but there is a lot of money to be made in this young industry. MyCointainer is one of the bridging sites that unburdens you of the intricacies of the workings of cryptocurrencies and enables your crypto investment to work for you in various ways.

It also has high liquidity, serves as the simplest and safest gateway to the world of digital currency investments, and is a perfect one-stop-shop for both beginners and advanced crypto investors.

The best thing about crypto investments is that they are cheap, and therefore, you don't have to worry about a fixed entry capital, unlike with stock markets or other traditional investments.

Start with any amount you have, and it is, in fact, advisable to test the waters with a small starting investment and grow it slowly until you are confident enough to take on a bigger risk.

Before we proceed, it is worth mentioning that there are over 3000 different types of cryptocurrencies, most of which have different use cases. The best way to get started is to pick one or two coins with the highest ROI (Return on Investment) and liquidity.

Crypto staking

Crypto staking is exactly what it sounds like. It involves buying and holding coins with the intention of being added to a mining pool so you can earn a profit. The amount you earn depends on how much in coins you have staked in the mining pool.

Unlike trading or mining, crypto staking is risk-free and passive. MyCointainer enables you to stake several coins that you can choose from the Asset's menu. The multiple filters allow you to view the list of coins by various categories, including return on investment, alphabetical order, and application industry (use case).

To profit from staking, you only need to pick the cryptocurrency coins of your choice and transfer them to the MyCointainer's staking wallet. Each coin has its own rate of reward fees and yearly returns.

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Popular Ways to Earn Money Online With MyCointainer

You can earn more on MyCointainer by taking part in their community participation and initiatives program, which requires an application to become a Super Member.

Super members can be rewarded with electronic gadgets and gift cards, 100% rewards from staking and masternodes and by taking part in Extra masternode shared rewards. They also get a chance to help others and their favorite coins or to become MyCointainer Ambassadors and get a private contract and a monthly salary.

Through initiatives, super members can use their stakes to vote for new coins or change in staking fees percentages, get rewards through but bounty by reporting bugs, or typos,, and suggest new features or partnerships for MyCointainer.

Conclusion

These are just the few two ways you can make money in the cryptocurrency industry, and once you get started, you will realize how easy, safe, exciting, and revolutionary it is.

If you are vigilant enough to immerse yourself fully into the cryptoverse, you will discover other ways to earn money online with cryptocurrencies. These include fan tokens, live trading, crypto synthetics, Bitcoin futures, ICOs, IEOs, and crypto mining.

The cryptoverse is vast, and the opportunities are many, but at more advanced levels, you will need to get more active and take time to educate yourself about blockchain technology. It is rewarding financially and fun to understand how cryptocurrencies work. The best way is to get started, and MyCointainer is definitely the best place to earn safely and inspire you to decide whether you'd like to learn more and discover other opportunities as well.

CONTACT:

Contact Name: MyCointainerOrganization Name: MyCointainerLocal Address: MyCointainer O | 14601743 | Tornime tn 5 / 2 floor, 10145, Kesklinna linnaosa, Tallinn, Harju maakond, EstoniaPhone: 0044 07902475006Email: contact@mycointainer.comWebsite: https://www.mycointainer.com/

SOURCE: MyCointainer

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MyCointainer: Earning Money Online with Cryptocurrency Has Never Been Easier. - Yahoo Finance

The Number of Women in Crypto and Blockchain Is Skyrocketing in 2020 – Cointelegraph

It is widely believed that the cryptocurrency and blockchain sectors are almost exclusively male-dominated. However, a report released by CoinMarketCap on April 30 suggests otherwise. According to analysts, the number of women in the cryptocurrency industry increased by 43.24% in the first quarter of 2020.

Below is a breakdown of key factors that contributed to this record growth and why the numbers vary from region to region.

A study published in December by Bitcoin (BTC) fund operator Grayscale showed that 43% of investors interested in Bitcoin are women up from 13% last year and this number is actively growing.

As global financial conditions tightened, many people began to invest in real estate, gold and cryptocurrencies. Assuming that females tend to be more pessimistic than males about the global economy, their confidence in cryptocurrency could significantly increase in 2020. As such, many women found a safe haven in digital assets.

Meanwhile, for others, cryptocurrencies became a promising investment. Blockchain entrepreneur Nisa Amoils pointed to the attractive investment opportunities of the market as one of the main reasons behind the growing interest of women toward digital money, telling Cointelegraph:

Women can get more income through trading, investing and virtual spending of Bitcoin. And the token economy can democratize access to capital through, for instance, security token offerings.

Many trading platforms have already seen an increase in cryptocurrency demand. For example, in March, digital currency exchange Coinbase noted the surge of deposits made by U.S. residents in the amount of $1,200 exactly the same size as the coronavirus stimulus checks issued by the United States government.

At the same time, Bitcoin has doubled in value over the past two months, which, coupled with the recent halving event, has caused a stir around cryptocurrencies. Here, women have been just as competent as men. In particular, according to Grayscale, 49.8% of women predicted that Bitcoins limited emission would lead to its price growth in the future.

The growth of the Bitcoin price as well as the investment attractiveness of digital money in general have contributed to an increase in the number of women in cryptocurrency exchanges. Thus, for example, cryptocurrency exchange Bithumb Global reported to Cointelegraph that the company witnessed a 30% growth in the number of its female users in 2020. Its vice president Vincent Poon explained that todays women use digital money to hedge their funds, although not all trade proactively:

I think women usually are less reserved when it comes to investing Bitcoin due to the technical piece of it and the volatility of the Bitcoin. I think they just are trying to diversify or hedge the portfolio and start looking at Bitcoin as alternate investment due to losing confidence in the traditional securities or economy as a whole during the pandemic. More women open accounts but not necessary trading though. They are exploring.

Cointelegraph found out that the number of female users has grown between 22% and 160% on the majority of top crypto exchanges since the beginning of the year. Notably, digital assets exchanges CEX.io and EXMO saw the same increase in the number of female users as Bithumb Global.

Alexander Kravets, CEO of CEX.io, shared the latest statistics with Cointelegraph: As part of our overall user base, CEX.IO has seen a 26.86% growth of the female user segment from Q1 to Q2 of 2020. Maria Stankevich, head of business development at EXMO, told Cointelegraph that the biggest growth occurred in the number of women aged 1824 and 3544. She added:

We noticed that sometimes the other family members of VIP traders started to trade. Probably it is connected with the fact that they want to gain some new skills.

United Kingdom-based crypto exchange CoinCorner revealed that the share of women among its users is now 14.7%, with a 22.8% increase in the number of female sign ups occurring in Q1 2020. Joanne Goldy, marketing specialist at CoinCorner, commented to Cointelegraph: In the first five years at CoinCorner, we saw limited interest from female audiences, with sign ups slowly rising from 10% to 14% over that period.

Meanwhile, OKCoin reported an even higher influx of women to its services. Hong Fang, CEO of the exchange, told Cointelegraph that there was an 80% increase in female traffic in Q1 2020, with 50% of these female users being net new users. He added that 40% of them were aged 25 to 34.

Taking the cake was Bitfinex, with a record 162% growth rate of new female users this year so far. Joe Morgan, the exchanges senior public relations manager, told Cointelegraph:

This growth clearly demonstrates an increasing interest in digital assets among women. As to why women are choosing to set up accounts with Bitfinex, perhaps this can in part be attributed to the diverse and inclusive nature of the business.

The slow but steady adoption of blockchain technology and cryptocurrencies could also contribute to an increasing number of women wishing to include this innovation in their everyday lives. In March, financial platform 2gether revealed that 23% of its app users are women aged between 26 to 45 and of different professions such as accountants, lawyers and economists. As the report points out, today female users spend cryptocurrency in the same way as they would spend their fiat money.

Additionally, Terra another crypto payment operator reported that 74% of its users are women in their late 30s and early 40s who paid with digital assets for clothes, coffee and other everyday goods. The statistics suggest that not only women who are millennials and geeks but also those without technical expertise or education have also begun to use cryptocurrencies.

CoinMarketCap data show that womens involvement in the crypto industry can also depend on geographic factors. For instance, the number of cryptocurrency users in the U.S. and Europe the regions with the highest level of demand for digital money has increased by 50% since the beginning of the year. The trend has been proved by the statistics released by 2gether, revealing that European women using digital currencies are mainly millennials and Gen Xers aged between 26 to 45 years old.

At the same time, some individual countries showed an increase of more than 100% in the number of female crypto users, according to CoinMarketCap. In Europe, for example, Greece stands out most, with a record growth of 163.67%. Nikolaos Kostopoulos, market adoption and partnerships officer at Harmony, noted economic and labor factors as the main reasons behind the increased number of women in the Greek crypto market, telling Cointelegraph:

The Greek economy was showing steady signs of improvement (post the pandemic crisis), while the job market was flourishing. This new wave of young professionals were actively seeking mediums to identify alternative investments. [...] Similarly, blockchain is among the skills on high-demand, especially along with the consulting and IT firms. The Greek IT industry is also experiencing more and more women joining, with similar trends in the technical & engineering academic institutions.

In onboarded women to the crypto space, Greece is followed by Romania with 125.09%, Portugal with 89.95%, Ukraine with 86.68% and the Czech Republic with 85.6%. In some of these countries, the growth can be linked to economic factors such as low gross domestic product and a high level of unemployment, while active development in the IT sector was a major driver in others.

Alyona Karpinskaya, CEO and founder of a Ukraine-based public relations agency PR-Blockchain, expanded upon this point to Cointelegraph, asserting that the sharp increase in Ukrainian womens interest in cryptocurrencies can be attributed to an increased number of IT companies and technologically educated women in the country. According to the data of 2019, the number of women working in Ukrainian IT sector increased by 62% compared to 2017, she said. The global financial crisis could also contribute to this influx, according to Karpinskaya:

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic and global quarantine, more than 53% of Ukrainian IT companies experienced loss of customers, which in turn could lead to significant financial losses and the need for specialists to search for alternative financial opportunities.

When it comes to female crypto users in Asian countries, Indonesia demonstrated the biggest progress, with an 88.92% increase in the number of women interested in digital money. Further north, in South Korea a country making big steps toward crypto legalization women in 2020 are reportedly spending more crypto on shopping than ever.

Meanwhile, in Latin America, Argentina seems to be the country making the biggest strides in the involvement of women in the digital technology industry, with a 98% increase in the number of female cryptocurrency holders. Walter Salama, founder and chief operating officer of Argentina-based mining company BitPatagonia, noted a growing number of Argentinian women engaged in the IT sector as one of the reasons behind this spike:

Argentina has an excellent world position regarding entrepreneurship, and ratio of unicorns by country. Women of this generation [aged to 65+] are leading many ventures. [...] Regarding the Blockchain ecosystem and Cryptocurrencies, in Argentina there are many women who are investing in projects and early adopters of Bitcoin.

The other two Latin American countries showing the largest increase in women in the crypto industry were Colombia with 82.03% and Venezuela with 80.23%. Among the possible reasons behind this growth are high inflation, restrictions on foreign exchange transactions and lack of local peoples confidence in the national currency.

Related: Interest in Bitcoin Spikes Worldwide During COVID-19 Crisis

At the same time, Africa and China demonstrated a negative trend in the number of women interested in cryptocurrencies, with the latter facing a significant reduction in the growth rate of female users in 2020. Analysts are attributing this to the coronavirus pandemic and the Chinese governments negative stance on digital money.

In the world of cryptocurrencies, there have been more women not only trading digital money but also entering roles traditionally dominated by men, including analysts, developers and company leads. At the same time, statistics show that blockchain companies founded by women can successfully compete with those run by men.

Large crypto companies such as Bancor and Binance are vivid examples of this, the former co-founded by Galia Benartzi and both with 40% to 50% of employees being women. Another crypto exchange, Huobi counting over 1,300 employees appointed Ciara Sun as the companys first female executive.

Related: Women in Blockchain: Has Gender Distribution Come to the Crypto Market?

More and more female representatives are coming to the crypto market following the successful examples of other women, according to OKCoins Hong Fang. He said: We are seeing more female startup founders and thought leaders enter crypto. Naturally this has had a positive impact on attracting more female users to crypto platforms.

The growing number of female participants and speakers at crypto conferences is clear proof of this. Christophe Ozcan, an organizer for the Paris Blockchain Summit, told Cointelegraph that the number of women participating in the conference doubled over the last year:

We have shown on our previous event in Paris Blockchain Summit a female growth of 56% as attendees and 22% growth as Speakers compare to our first edition on 2018.

Ozcan added that the average age of female participants was 33 years, meaning that more mature attendees are getting interested in cryptocurrencies. Confirming this trend, Eman Pulis, CEO of the Malta AI & Blockchain Summit, noted a low level of gender inequality in the cryptocurrency sector: Female participation across all levels in Emerging Tech has been very encouraging, both in terms of quantity and quality delegates are engaging and speakers are enlightening.

Alyona Karpinskaya agreed that the lack of gender discrimination fostered the growth of the number of women engaged in cryptocurrency activities. Therefore, 2020 appears to be the year for women empowerment and gender equality more than ever before. Jarred Thomas, operations manager at cryptocurrency exchange OKEx, chimed in during a conversation with Cointelegraph:

Over the past years, more women have stepped up in the crypto space. Whats more, they demonstrated their unique sense, creativity, and leadership in crypto through their exceptional contributions to the industry.

However, the question remains: Will women who have recently entered the cryptocurrency market be effectively onboarded into the space? Hsin-Ju Chuang, whose Dystopia Labs educates people in blockchain, explained to Cointelegraph why a surge of the number of females in the industry doesnt necessarily mean that all of them will become professional crypto users. Chuang also noted the importance of providing further education:

Now that there are more women at the top of the funnel, are education organizations able (and actively trying) to reach out to them, educate, and bring them deeper down the rabbit hole? Ie. transform them from being a speculator into an active network participant?

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The Number of Women in Crypto and Blockchain Is Skyrocketing in 2020 - Cointelegraph

Thailand Sticks by its Cryptocurrency Commitment – The Phuket News

The world is facing a great deal of uncertainty in the light of the coronavirus pandemic. But against that background, Thailand is continuing to show its support for cryptocurrencies.

As the virus was continuing its spread across the globe in early March, the country saw the full launch of Huobi. The exchange gives full fiat access to currencies including Bitcoin, Ethereum and Huobi Token. It received its Digital Assets Licence in 2019. More recently, it received full clearance to operate from the Securities and Exchange Commission.

This is fully in line with the countrys commitment to cryptocurrencies in general. In fact, its one of relatively few countries in the world in which they have been officially recognized. The reason for this interest is simple. The authorities believe that cryptocurrency businesses may contribute greatly to the economy by offering future employment opportunities.

However, despite the launch, many people are advising caution. Already volatile, cryptocurrencies have been seen to experience even greater shifts in value against the backdrop of increased global uncertainty. As the biggest single cryptocurrency, its logical that Bitcoin is the one whose fortunes are being most closely followed. And the double-digit falls between February and March mean this scrutiny has intensified. Arguably, one of the founding purposes of Bitcoin was that it would be a safe haven in times of economic uncertainty. But in the current circumstances, some observers are expressing doubts that this is the case.

That said, cryptocurrencies are available to trade on a 24/7 basis. This means that, unlike traditional markets, they are arguably less exposed to volatility over the weekend. The same can be said of anyone investing or trading in them. Some platforms have begun to allow for market trading at the weekend on shares indices in addition to forex and cryptocurrency markets. This proves the importance of being able to make decisions and take actions on the spot when trading. At this time, all these markets seem to be in a state of constant flux. One outcome of that could be that the tendency for trading to be concentrated during the working week from Monday to Friday will slacken. It is therefore significant that cryptocurrencies have always been available to trade in this way.

Indeed, the Thai authorities seem to be sticking by their commitment to cryptocurrencies. It is believed that they are planning to make several changes to the laws governing the way they are traded. This move was first discussed last year and comes in the wake of just five companies applying for licences and authorization to trade. That will have been a source of great disappointment to the financial authorities. What these changes will be is not known. It is equally hard to guess whether national and global economic conditions will also have an effect on them.

But it is certain that, as the world emerges from the restrictions forced upon it in the early months of 2020, there will be a great deal of economic ground to make up. Whether Bitcoin, and cryptocurrencies in general, will have a valuable role to play in the process, only time will tell.

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Thailand Sticks by its Cryptocurrency Commitment - The Phuket News

Man charged over cryptocurrency investment fraud – The Star Online

KOTA KINABALU (Bernama): A man has pleaded not guilty in the Magistrates Court here to two counts of illegal deposit taking activities related to cryptocurrency investments amounting to RM425,710.

On the first count, the accused, Mohd Wannor Ramdan Awang, 25, was charged with deceiving a victim at a restaurant here, between July to September last year, to invest RM392,860, without a valid licence, as stipulated under Section 10 of the Financial Services Act 2013.

The accused was charged with committing the offence by deceiving the victim into depositing the sum into his bank account.

He was charged under Section 137 (1) of the Financial Services Act 2013 and punishable under Section 137 (2) of the same law, which carries a maximum jail term of 10 years or a fine of up to RM50mil or both if convicted.

Magistrate Jessica Ombou Kakayun on Wednesday (May 13) allowed RM12,000 bail in four sureties and set June 11 for mention.

In a separate court, Wannor also claimed trial to another charge of deceiving another victim at a bank in Damai Plaza in July last year around 4pm.

He was alleged to have lured the victim into depositing RM32,850 into his bank account for the purpose of investment.

He was charged under Section 420 of the Penal Code, which provides for a maximum jail term of 10 years and whipping and also liable to a fine upon conviction.

Magistrate Afiq Agoes set bail at RM8,800 in two sureties and fixed June 18 for mention. Bernama

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Man charged over cryptocurrency investment fraud - The Star Online

Cryptocurrency market update: Donald Trump will send Bitcoin to the moon – FXStreet

The American president Donald Trump pressured on the FED to force the regulator to lower rates deeper into the negative territory. He believes the central bank should keep up with global trends and support the economy with negative rates.

The same views aired the former head of FED in Minneapolis Narayana Kocherlakota.

Bitcoin enthusiasts criticized this approach as it means that the citizens would have to pay for saving money. They believe that this policy would speed up the cryptocurrency adoption as people will seek for alternative ways to protect their wealth.

Bitcoin (BTC) has returned back on the recovery track. After hitting the low of $8,100 on May 10, the first digital asset got back above $9,000 to trade at $9,120 at the time of writing. A sustainable move above the thick layer of stops clustered around $9,000 improved the technical picture and opened up the way towards next resistance at $9,200. The volatility remains high.

Ethereum settled above $197.00 amid strong recovery from as low as $188.41. The second-largest digital asset gained over 3.6% since the start of the day moving in sync with the market. The next resistance is created by a psychological $200.00.

XRP/USD is changing hands at $0.2013 as the coin struggles to settle above the upper boundary of the recent consolidation channel at $0.2000. The next resistance is created by $0.2030 (38.2% Fibo retracement for the downside move from February 2020 high).

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Cryptocurrency market update: Donald Trump will send Bitcoin to the moon - FXStreet

Cryptocurrency Market Update: Bitcoin, Ethereum and Ripple have positive starts as the bulls rush in – FXStreet

ETH/BTC bears tool control for the second straight day as the price fell from 0.02155 to 0.0213. The RSI is trending horizontally around 36, right next to the oversold zone. If the bulls were to take back control, they must push the price above the SMA 200, 0.0217 and 0.022. For the bears to continue their domination, they must aim for the 0.0211 and 0.02055 levels.

Buyers take control for the second consecutive day as the price went up from $8,572 to $8,918, having found reliable support at the SMA 20 and the upward trending line. The 20-day Bollinger jaw has narrowed, which indicates decreasing price volatility.

The MACD indicates increasing bearish momentum, while the Elliott Oscillator has had three straight red sessions. The bulls must conquer resistance levels at $9,172.88 and $9,605. On the downside, good support lies at $8,606.12 and $&,963.80, along with the SMA 200.

ETH/USD bulls have taken the price up from $185.82 to $190.55, entering the red Ichimoku cloud in the process. The SMA 50 has crossed over the SMA 200 to chart the golden cross pattern. The William %R is trending around -70, moving along the edge of the oversold zone.

On the upside, there is astrong resistance levelat $199.85. Following that, the buyers must overcome the resistance at the SMA 20 and then cross above the $214.60-level. Healthy support levels lie at $190.70 and $174.

XRP/USD found support at the SMA 50 curve and jumped. The price has gone up from $0.1926 to $0.198 in the early hours of Wednesday. The bulls must jump above the SMA 20 curve and the $0.213 level to enter the red Ichimoku cloud. Following that. The buyers can attempt to climb above the cloud by conquering the $0.2263 level. On the downside, the price has found healthy support at $0.189 and $0.177.

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Cryptocurrency Market Update: Bitcoin, Ethereum and Ripple have positive starts as the bulls rush in - FXStreet

Author David Rohde on what the deep state is and why Trump is obsessed with it – Vox.com

A New York Times story in April chronicled the chaos within the Trump White House as it initially responded to the coronavirus pandemic. One of the throwaway revelations in that piece was that the presidents delayed reaction to the crisis was partially due to his fears about the deep state.

Mr. Trumps response, the authors write, was colored by his suspicion of and disdain for what he viewed as the deep state, the very people in his government whose expertise and long experience might have guided him more quickly toward steps that would slow the virus, and likely save lives.

Under normal circumstances, this would be bad; in a pandemic, its terrifying. Now, more than ever, expertise is needed, and Trump isnt especially interested. That a lot of his supporters think the virus itself is a deep state coup isnt helping matters.

And Trumps deep state obsession isnt a new thing. Hes been pumping up this theory since special counsel Robert Mueller launched the investigation into Russias interference in the 2016 election. It has always been a diversion, whether it was coming from Trump or Fox News.

But heres the thing: The deep state isnt exactly a phantasm. There are parts of the US government that wield real power outside the conventional checks and balances of the system. Its not a conspiracy against Trump, but the term does refer to something that exists.

David Rohde is an editor at the New Yorker and the author of In Deep: The FBI, the CIA, and the Truth About Americas Deep State. Its a fair-minded look at the deep state and the various conspiracy theories surrounding it. The term deep state, Rohde argues, has become a way for Trump and his supporters to deflect criticism but its also a real idea that can help us think through some legitimate issues, namely how we consider the limits of presidential power and the nature of government accountability.

I spoke to Rohde by phone about how the deep state has evolved into a sprawling conspiracy theory and if he thinks Trumps complaints about it are at all justified. Ultimately, Rohde believes the deep state is both a real thing and a toxic distraction.

A lightly edited transcript of our conversation follows.

What the hell is the deep state, David?

To be honest, I hate the term. I believe its just political rhetoric. Its the equivalent of terms like fake news and witch hunt.

Now, on a deeper level, I do think theres what we might call a permanent government or an institutional government. We have these incredibly large and powerful organizations like the FBI and the CIA and the NSA. In the digital age especially, when the ability to surveil is so immense, these are potentially dangerous agencies. Together these organizations make up what a lot of people mean by deep state, and I agree they need aggressive oversight.

I get why you hate the term, but it does at least refer to something real, right?

Thats true. The problem is that the term has become an effective way of signaling a conspiracy for which there just isnt any evidence.

Whats the origin of this term? When did it take on the meaning it has now?

For decades, the term deep state was applied to Turkey. It was a reference to the Turkish military and their efforts to slow the spread of democracy there. Some applied it to Egypt and the Egyptian military to describe the same thing. The first time I found that the term deep state was applied to the US government was a book written in 2007 by a University of California Berkeley professor named Peter Dale Scott.

I interviewed Scott for my book, and he used the term deep state to describe what liberals typically fear, which is the military-industrial complex. Scott wrote about a sense that the military and defense contractors had driven the country repeatedly into wars and maybe helped fuel 9/11 and the wars that followed. For Scott, it also applied to large financial interests, like Wall Street banks.

But Scott eventually ended up doing interviews with people on the right, like conspiracy theorist Alex Jones, and the term was sort of co-opted and vulgarized into what it is today, which is a shorthand for a conspiracy against Donald Trump.

Could we maybe say that, in the most generous sense possible, the term deep state is a way for both sides to describe parts of the government or forces that interact with government that arent elected or are beyond the conventional checks and balances of our system?

I think thats fair. But I also think its extraordinarily effective political messaging that Trump uses to discredit rivals or people who question him.

His use of it has evolved, too. First, it was a reference to the FBIs Russia investigation, and then it was extended to the CIA as well. But more recently he declared the Pentagon part of the deep state when some Pentagon officials questioned his defense of a Navy SEAL accused of war crimes. And now, some of Trumps supporters are absurdly declaring [head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases] Dr. Fauci part of the deep state as well.

Trumps election was a shock event for a lot of people, especially for people who worked in government and were accustomed to a certain level of continuity. Did their self-conception or their understanding of their own role shift once Trump took office? What do they think theyre doing?

Most current officials Ive talked to say theyre trying to do their jobs and keep their heads down and they dont want to be part of the political brawl. And a lot of them think theyve been hurt by the outspokenness of people like former FBI Director James Comey and others like him. They think that damages them and makes their job harder.

How so?

They think it feeds the conspiracy theories Trump and his supporters are spinning up every day. And, to be fair, a lot of them know there was already a lot of distrust of their work after the Ed Snowden leaks [in 2013, Snowden leaked thousands of classified documents about NSA spying programs], and so thats a cloud hovering over everything. Trump, in his own way, has exploited that lack of trust.

One of the reasons I wrote the book was a 2018 poll that found that more than 70 percent of Americans think that there is a group of unelected officials who secretly influence policy in Washington. Something like 80 percent believe they are being surveilled by the government, and the groups that had the highest belief in this or had the highest fear of this were on the right side of the spectrum.

Is there a case for a more robust deep state, especially when the power of the American presidency keeps growing? Is it necessarily bad to have an alternative check on the executive?

I dont think that civil servants should be resisting lawful policies being carried out by elected officials. If a civil servant doesnt want to work for the Trump administration, they should just quit. A core ideal of our democracy is that there is a mandate that comes with elections every two, four, or six years. That mandate has to mean something. If we start playing this game of allowing unelected officials to intervene when they think its necessary, thats dangerous and unpredictable.

Every president has expressed frustration with Washington when they came into office. Reagan complained about the State Department not wanting to fight communism as aggressively as he did. Barack Obama feared that Pentagon officials were leaking possible numbers for a troop increase in Afghanistan as a way to box him in and force him to send more troops than he wanted to Afghanistan. Its the way its always been.

So I think if its a lawful policy or order, civil servants should carry it out.

Theres obviously a sense in which Trump uses the term deep state as a diversion, a way of dismissing legitimate criticisms of himself and his administration. But does he in any way have a point when he complains about the deep state trying to undermine the White House? And I mean beyond the typical stuff you just cited.

Trumps strongest case is about the FBIs Russia investigation, and the fact that the Justice Department inspector general found that low-level FBI officials changed documents that were part of their application to surveil Carter Page. Thats bad. Theres a huge problem with the FISA process, and I accept the finding of the inspector general that the first two warrants for Carter Page to be surveilled were legal, while the subsequent two were not.

Thats bad, no doubt, but its not an attempted coup, as the president claimed.

Absolutely not. Trump Tower was not wiretapped. Carter Page was a former Trump campaign adviser at that point. And just anecdotally, if the FBI wanted to sink his election chances, the FBI and Justice Department would have leaked during the campaign in 2016 that they were investigating him, but they didnt do that.

Bill Barr, Trumps attorney general, gave a speech to the Federalist Society last year celebrating the power of the executive branch. He never mentions the deep state, but its pretty clear Barr believes its real and a problem

Well, yes

Or am I going too far?

The attorney general believes that the deep state in the form of the FBI investigation of Donald Trump was hugely problematic. I believe he called it one of the greatest travesties in American history. I obviously disagree with that. Again, it was wrong that Carter Page was surveilled for longer than he should have been, but the Mueller investigation was carried out properly. Mueller essentially exonerated Trump of collusion.

But to add a little context to that Barr speech: He believes the legislative and judicial branches have created more power for themselves since the 70s than they should have. He thinks the balance of power is off and his reading of the Constitution is that the executive branch should be able to use the FBI to defend the country as needed, and its the only branch that can act decisively in a crisis and we need a powerful president to sort of preserve the country.

Its hard to read your book right now without thinking about the coronavirus pandemic. How do you think Trumps perception of the deep state impacted his response to the virus?

I spoke to a person who left the administration recently who felt that Trumps suspicion of government officials was one of several factors that slowed the response to the coronavirus. They also felt that Trumps belief in business, that businesses could outperform government agencies, was a big factor.

More broadly, I think all of this has shown how important basic facts are. There was an Axios poll that came out this week that showed that over 60 percent of Americans dont think that death totals from coronavirus are accurate. Democrats think the death totals are actually higher than is being publicly reported. Republicans believe the death totals are lower. And if we cant agree on a basic fact about how many people are dying of coronavirus, how are we going to come up with policies to help each other through this?

Were in this cycle of distrust and disdain and conspiracy theories, and its dangerous, and obviously Trumps public doubting of his own government isnt helping.

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Every day at Vox, we aim to answer your most important questions and provide you, and our audience around the world, with information that has the power to save lives. Our mission has never been more vital than it is in this moment: to empower you through understanding. Voxs work is reaching more people than ever, but our distinctive brand of explanatory journalism takes resources particularly during a pandemic and an economic downturn. Your financial contribution will not constitute a donation, but it will enable our staff to continue to offer free articles, videos, and podcasts at the quality and volume that this moment requires. Please consider making a contribution to Vox today.

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Author David Rohde on what the deep state is and why Trump is obsessed with it - Vox.com

Consortium News Blazed the Trail of Russiagate Reporting; Help Us to Continue Telling the Story – Consortium News

With his first article on what would become known as Russiagatewritten on Aug. 9, 2016, three months before the electionBob Parry positioned CN as the leading skeptic of the alleged scandal.

The White House, Moscow, 2015. (Joe Lauria)

By Joe LauriaSpecial to Consortium News

From our founding editor Bob Parrys first article on Russiagate in August 2016 to Patrick Lawrences column on Monday, Consortium News has for nearly four years been in the forefront of skeptical analysis of a purported scandal that engulfed the United States but then ignominiously collapsed.

Throughout the years in which the American public was subjected to the daily gymnastics of the corporate media trying to brand Donald Trump as a Kremlin agent and Moscow as a destroyer of American democracy, Consortium News writers, led by Parry, methodically demolished what in the end was proved a reckless theory of conspiracy.

Parry did so in the name of pursuing critical, non-partisan journalism, for which Parry and his writers nonetheless were smeared as Trump supporters and Kremlin apologists. Being critical only of ones opposing party, which American journalism has devolved into, is no journalism at all.

In that first article, Parry provided an inkling of what was to come, identifying what would erupt into Russiagate as this latest group think. That indeed became the case as the media whipped itself into a self-perpetuating frenzy in which at least 50erroneous stories were published and cool evaluation of facts fell prey to partisan fervor.

Todays Democrats apparently feel little shame in whipping up an anti-Russian hysteria and then using it to discredit Trump and other Americans who wont join this latest group think, Parry wrote. He went on, in a harbinger of things to come:

While lacking any verifiable proof, Clintons campaign and its allied mainstream media have blamed Russian intelligence for hacking into the Democratic National Committees emails and then publicizing them through Wikileaks. This conspiracy theory holds that Putin is trying to influence the U.S. election to put his secret agent, Donald Trump, into the White House.

[See Parrys first Russiagate story, Hillary Clintons Turn to McCarthyism, on Aug. 9, 2016, republished today.]

Parry and other CN writers went on to pick apart the core Russiagate allegations: that Russia hacked the Democratic National Committee and gave Clinton emails to WikiLeaks for publication; that the Trump campaign colluded with Russia; that President Trump continued to act in the White House as an agent of the Kremlin and lastly, that $100,000 of Facebook ads by a Russian troll farm divided American society.

All of it was ludicrously compared to a new Pearl Harbor.

True Russiagate believers still deny the clear evidence of the Mueller report, that there was no collusion or conspiracy between Russia and the Trump campaign; they deny newly released evidence that the head of a private firm the government relied on to prove Russias hack admitted under oath it had no such evidence; and they deny the fact that the Mueller indictment of the troll farm was dropped after the St. Petersburg defendants sought discovery.

The Russiagate saga is not over. The investigation into how all this came about continues.

While Bob is no longer with us, his work on Russiagate carries on at Consortium News. But we cant do it without you. Help us to continue covering the story that Bob started with a generous, tax-deductible donation during our 25th Anniversary Spring Fund Drive. Thank you.

Please Donate

Moscow River at night, 2015. (Joe Lauria)

Joe Lauria is editor-in-chief of Consortium News and a former correspondent for The Wall Street Journal, Boston Globe,Sunday Timesof London and numerous other newspapers. He began his professional career as a stringer for The New York Times. He can be reached atjoelauria@consortiumnews.com and followed on Twitter @unjoe .

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Consortium News Blazed the Trail of Russiagate Reporting; Help Us to Continue Telling the Story - Consortium News

Putin Is Well on His Way to Stealing the Next Election – The Atlantic

Jack Cable sat down at the desk in his cramped dorm room to become an adult in the eyes of democracy. The rangy teenager, with neatly manicured brown hair and chunky glasses, had recently arrived at Stanfordhis first semester of life away from homeand the 2018 midterm elections were less than two months away. Although he wasnt one for covering his laptop with strident stickers or for taking loud stands, he felt a genuine thrill at the prospect of voting. But before he could cast an absentee ballot, he needed to register with the Board of Elections back home in Chicago.

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When Cable tried to complete the digital forms, an error message stared at him from his browser. Clicking back to his initial entry, he realized that he had accidentally typed an extraneous quotation mark into his home address. The fact that a single keystroke had short-circuited his registration filled Cable with a sense of dread.

Despite his youth, Cable already enjoyed a global reputation as a gifted hackeror, as he is prone to clarify, an ethical hacker. As a sophomore in high school, he had started participating in bug bounties, contests in which companies such as Google and Uber publicly invite attacks on their digital infrastructure so that they can identify and patch vulnerabilities before malicious actors can exploit them. Cable, who is preternaturally persistent, had a knack for finding these soft spots. He collected enough cash prizes from the bug bounties to cover the costs of four years at Stanford.

Though it wouldnt have given the average citizen a moment of pause, Cable recognized the error message on the Chicago Board of Elections website as a telltale sign of a gaping hole in its security. It suggested that the site was vulnerable to those with less beneficent intentions than his own, that they could read and perhaps even alter databases listing the names and addresses of voters in the countrys third-largest city. Despite his technical savvy, Cable was at a loss for how to alert the authorities. He began sending urgent warnings about the problem to every official email address he could find. Over the course of the next seven months, he tried to reach the citys chief information officer, the Illinois governors office, and the Department of Homeland Security.

As he waited for someone to take notice of his missives, Cable started to wonder whether the rest of Americas electoral infrastructure was as weak as Chicagos. He read about how, in 2016, when he was a junior in high school, Russian military intelligenceknown by its initials, GRUhad hacked the Illinois State Board of Elections website, transferring the personal data of tens of thousands of voters to Moscow. The GRU had even tunneled into the computers of a small Florida company that sold software to election officials in eight states.

Out of curiosity, Cable checked to see what his home state had done to protect itself in the years since. Within 15 minutes of poking around the Board of Elections website, he discovered that its old weaknesses had not been fully repaired. These were the most basic lapses in cybersecuritypreventable with code learned in an introductory computer-science classand they remained even though similar gaps had been identified by the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security, not to mention widely reported in the media. The Russians could have strolled through the same door as they had in 2016.

From the January/February 2018 issue cover story: What Putin really wants

Between classes, Cable began running tests on the rest of the national electoral infrastructure. He found that some states now had formidable defenses, but many others were like Illinois. If a teenager in a dorm roomeven an exceptionally talented onecould find these vulnerabilities, they were not going to be missed by a disciplined unit of hackers that has spent years studying these networks, a unit with the resources of a powerful nation bent on discrediting an American election.

#DemocracyRIP was both the hashtag and the plan. The Russians were expecting the election of Hillary Clintonand preparing to immediately declare it a fraud. The embassy in Washington had attempted to persuade American officials to allow its functionaries to act as observers in polling places. A Twitter campaign alleging voting irregularities was queued. Russian diplomats were ready to publicly denounce the results as illegitimate. Events in 2016, of course, veered in the other direction. Yet the hashtag is worth pausing over for a moment, because, though it was never put to its intended use, it remains an apt title for a mission that is still unfolding.

Russias interference in the last presidential election is among the most closely studied phenomena in recent American history, having been examined by Special Counsel Robert Mueller and his prosecutors, by investigators working for congressional committees, by teams within Facebook and Twitter, by seemingly every think tank with access to a printing press. Its possible, however, to mistake a plot pointthe manipulation of the 2016 electionfor the full sweep of the narrative.

Events in the United States have unfolded more favorably than any operative in Moscow could have ever dreamed: Not only did Russias preferred candidate win, but he has spent his first term fulfilling the potential it saw in him, discrediting American institutions, rending the seams of American culture, and isolating a nation that had styled itself as indispensable to the free world. But instead of complacently enjoying its triumph, Russia almost immediately set about replicating it. Boosting the Trump campaign was a tactic; #DemocracyRIP remains the larger objective.

From the April 2020 issue: George Packer on how Trump is winning his war on American institutions

In the week that followed Donald Trumps election, Russia used its fake accounts on social media to organize a rally in New York City supporting the president-electand another rally in New York decrying him. Hackers continued attempting to break into state voting systems; trolls continued to launch social-media campaigns intended to spark racial conflict. Through subsidiaries, the Russian government continued to funnel cash to viral-video channels with names like In the Now and ICYMI, which build audiences with ephemera (Man Licks Store Shelves in Online Post), then hit unsuspecting readers with arguments about Syria and the CIA. This winter, the Russians even secured airtime for their overt propaganda outlet Sputnik on three radio stations in Kansas, bringing the networks drive-time depictions of American hypocrisy to the heartland.

While the Russians continued their efforts to undermine American democracy, the United States belatedly began to devise a response. Across governmentif not at the top of itthere was a panicked sense that American democracy required new layers of defense. Senators drafted legislation with grandiose titles; bureaucrats unfurled the blueprints for new units and divisions; law enforcement assigned bodies to dedicated task forces. Yet many of the warnings have gone unheeded, and what fortifications have been built appear inadequate.

Jack Cable is a small emblem of how the U.S. government has struggled to outpace the Russians. After he spent the better part of a semester shouting into the wind, officials in Chicago and in the governors office finally took notice of his warnings and repaired their websites. Cable may have a further role to play in defending Americas election infrastructure. He is part of a team of competitive hackers at Stanfordnational champions three years runningthat caught the attention of Alex Stamos, a former head of security at Facebook, who now teaches at the university. Earlier this year, Stamos asked the Department of Homeland Security if he could pull together a group of undergraduates, Cable included, to lend Washington a hand in the search for bugs. Its talent, but unrefined talent, Stamos told me. DHS, which has an acute understanding of the problem at hand but limited resources to solve it, accepted Stamoss offer. Less than six months before Election Day, the government will attempt to identify democracys most glaring weakness by deploying college kids on their summer break.

Despite such well-intentioned efforts, the nations vulnerabilities have widened, not narrowed, during the past four years. Our politics are even more raw and fractured than in 2016; our faith in governmentand, perhaps, democracy itselfis further strained. The coronavirus may meaningfully exacerbate these problems; at a minimum, the pandemic is leeching attention and resources from election defense. The president, meanwhile, has dismissed Russian interference as a hoax and fired or threatened intelligence officials who have contradicted that narrative, all while professing his affinity for the very man who ordered this assault on American democracy. Fiona Hill, the scholar who served as the top Russia expert on Trumps National Security Council, told me, The fact that they faced so little consequence for their action gives them little reason to stop.

The Russians have learned much about American weaknesses, and how to exploit them. Having probed state voting systems far more extensively than is generally understood by the public, they are now surely more capable of mayhem on Election Dayand possibly without leaving a detectable trace of their handiwork. Having hacked into the inboxes of political operatives in the U.S. and abroad, theyve pioneered new techniques for infiltrating campaigns and disseminating their stolen goods. Even as to disinformation, the best-known and perhaps most overrated of their tactics, they have innovated, finding new ways to manipulate Americans and to poison the nations politics. Russias interference in 2016 might be remembered as the experimental prelude that foreshadowed the attack of 2020.

When officials arrived at work on the morning of May 22, 2014, three days before a presidential election, they discovered that their hard drives were fried. Hours earlier, pro-Kremlin hackers had taken a digital sledgehammer to a vital piece of Ukraines democratic infrastructure, the network that collects vote tallies from across the nation. After finishing the task, they taunted their victim, posting photos of an election commissioners renovated bathroom and his wifes passport.

Relying on a backup system, the Ukrainians were able to resuscitate their network. But on election night the attacks persisted. Hackers sent Russian journalists a link to a chart they had implanted on the official website of Ukraines Central Election Commission. The graphic purported to show that a right-wing nationalist had sprinted to the lead in the presidential race. Although the public couldnt access the chart, Russian state television flashed the forged results on its highly watched newscast.

If the attack on Ukraine represented something like all-out digital war, Russias hacking of the United States electoral system two years later was more like a burglar going house to house jangling doorknobs. The Russians had the capacity to cause far greater damage than they didat the very least to render Election Day a chaotic messbut didnt act on it, because they deemed such an operation either unnecessary or not worth the cost. The U.S. intelligence community has admitted that its not entirely sure why Russia sat on its hands. One theory holds that Barack Obama forced Russian restraint when he pulled Vladimir Putin aside at the end of the G20 Summit in Hangzhou, China, on September 5, 2016. With only interpreters present, Obama delivered a carefully worded admonition not to mess with the integrity of the election. By design, he didnt elaborate any specific consequence for ignoring his warning.

From the March 2017 issue: Franklin Foer on how Vladimir Putin became the hero of nationalists everywhere

Perhaps the warning was heeded. The GRU kept on probing voting systems through the month of October, however, and there are other, more ominous explanations for Russias apparent restraint. Michael Daniel, who served as the cybersecurity coordinator on Obamas National Security Council, told the Senate Intelligence Committee that the Russians were, in essence, casing the joint. They were gathering intelligence about the digital networks that undergird American elections and putting together a map so that they could come back later and actually execute an operation.

What sort of operation could Russia execute in 2020? Unlike Ukraine, the United States doesnt have a central node that, if struck, could disable democracy at its core. Instead, the United States has an array of smaller but still alluring targets: the vendors, niche companies, that sell voting equipment to states and localities; the employees of those governments, each with passwords that can be stolen; voting machines that connect to the internet to transmit election results.

Matt Masterson is a senior adviser at the Department of Homeland Securitys freshly minted Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, a bureau assigned to help states protect elections from outside attack; its where Jack Cable will work this summer. I asked Masterson to describe the scenarios that keep him up at night. His greatest fear is that an election official might inadvertently enable a piece of ransomware. These are malicious bits of code that encrypt data and files, essentially placing a lock on a system; money is then demanded in exchange for the key. In 2017, Ukraine was targeted again, this time with a similar piece of malware called NotPetya. But instead of extorting Ukraine, Russia sought to cripple it. NotPetya wiped 10 percent of the nations computers; it disabled ATMs, telephone networks, and banks. (The United States is well aware of NotPetyas potency, because it relied on a tool created byand stolen fromthe National Security Agency.) If the Russians attached such a bug to a voter-registration database, they could render an entire election logistically unfeasible; tracking who had voted and where theyd voted would be impossible.

But Russia need not risk such a devastating attack. It can simply meddle with voter-registration databases, which are filled with vulnerabilities similar to the ones that Cable exposed. Such meddling could stop short of purging voters from the rolls and still cause significant disruptions: Hackers could flip the digits in addresses, so that voters photo IDs no longer match the official records. When people arrived at the polls, they would likely still be able to vote, but might be forced to cast provisional ballots. The confusion and additional paperwork would generate long lines and stoke suspicion about the underlying integrity of the election.

Given the fragility of American democracy, even the tiniest interference, or hint of interference, could undermine faith in the tally of the vote. On Election Night, the Russians could place a page on the Wisconsin Elections Commission website that falsely showed Trump with a sizable lead. Government officials would be forced to declare it a hoax. Imagine how Twitter demagogues, the president among them, would exploit the ensuing confusion.

Such scenarios ought to have sparked a clamor for systemic reform. But in the past, when the federal government has pointed out these vulnerabilitiesand attempted to protect against themthe states have chafed and moaned. In August 2016, President Obamas homeland-security secretary, Jeh Johnson, held a conference call with state election officials and informed them of the need to safeguard their infrastructure. Instead of accepting his offer of help, they told him, This is our responsibility and there should not be a federal takeover of the election system.

After the 2016 election, the federal government could have taken a stronger hand with localities. Unprecedented acts of foreign interference presumably would have provided quite a bit of leverage. That did not happen. The president perceives any suggestion of Russian interference as the diminution of his own legitimacy. This has contributed to a conspiracy of silence about the events of 2016. A year after the election, the Department of Homeland Security told 21 states that Russia had attempted to hack their electoral systems. Two years later, a Senate report publicly disclosed that Russia had, in fact, targeted all 50 states. When thenDHS Secretary Kirstjen Nielsen tried to raise the subject of electoral security with the president, acting White House Chief of Staff Mick Mulvaney reportedly told her to steer clear of it. According to The New York Times, Mulvaney said it wasnt a great subject and should be kept below his level.

From the April 2019 issue: William J. Burns on how the U.S.-Russian relationship went bad

This atmosphere stifled what could have been a genuinely bipartisan accomplishment. The subject of voting divides Republicans and Democrats. Especially since the Bush v. Gore decision in 2000, the parties have stitched voting into their master narratives. Democrats accuse Republicans of suppressing the vote; Republicans accuse Democrats of flooding the polls with corpses and other cheating schemes. Despite this rancor, both sides seemed to agree that Russian hacking of voting systems was not a good thing. After the 2016 election, Democratic Senator Amy Klobuchar, from Minnesota, partnered with Republican Senator James Lankford, from Oklahoma, on the Secure Elections Act. The bill would have given the states money to replace electronic voting machines with ones that leave a paper trail and would have required states to audit election results to confirm their accuracy. The reforms would also have had the seemingly salutary effect of making it easier for voters to cast ballots.

The Secure Elections Act wouldnt have provided perfect insulation from Russian attacks, but it would have been a meaningful improvement on the status quo, and it briefly looked as if it could pass. Then, on the eve of a session to mark up the legislationa moment for lawmakers to add their final touchesSenate Republicans suddenly withdrew their support, effectively killing the bill. Afterward, Democrats mocked Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell as Moscow Mitch, an appellation that stung enough that the senator ultimately agreed to legislation that supplied the states with hundreds of millions of dollars to buy new voting systemsbut without any security demands placed on the states or any meaningful reforms to a broken system. McConnell made it clear that he despised the whole idea of a legislative fix to the electoral-security problem: Im not going to let Democrats and their water carriers in the media use Russias attack on our democracy as a Trojan horse for partisan wish-list items that would not actually make our elections any safer. For McConnell, suppressing votes was a higher priority than protecting them from a foreign adversary.

To raise the subject of John Podestas email in his presence is a callous act. But I wanted his help tabulating a more precise toll of Russian hackinghow it leaves a messy trail of hurt feelings, saps precious mental space, and reshapes the course of a campaign. After repeatedly prodding him for an interview, I finally met with Hillary Clintons old campaign chief in his Washington office, which stares down onto the steeple of the church Abraham Lincoln attended during the Civil War. Dressed in a plaid shirt, with a ballpoint pen clipped into the pocket, Podesta rocked back and forth in a swivel chair as he allowed me to question him about one of the most wince-inducing moments in recent political history.

Months before WikiLeaks began publishing his emails, Podesta had an inkling that his Gmail account had been compromised. Internal campaign documents had appeared on an obscure website, and he considered the possibility that they had been lifted from his computer. Still, the call from a member of the campaigns communications team on October 7, 2016, left him gobsmacked. As he finished a session of debate preparation with Clinton, he learned that Julian Assange intended to unfurl the contents of his inbox over the remaining month of the campaign. Its a familiar if much-ignored maxim in politics that no email should ever contain content one wouldnt want to see on the front page of The New York Times. This was now Podestas reality.

On the 10th floor of the Clinton campaigns headquarters, in Brooklyn, a team of 14 staffers quickly assembled. They covered a glass door in opaque paper to prevent voyeurs from observing their work and began to pore over every word of his 60,000 emailsevery forwarded PDF, every gripe from an employee, even the meticulous steps of his risotto recipe. The project would consume the entirety of the month. Every day, Podesta set aside time to meet with emissaries from the 10th floor and review their findings. I willed myself not to feel pain, he told me.

The material that WikiLeaks eventually posted created some awkward moments. Podesta had received snarky emails from colleagues, and had sent a few himself. To repair relationships, Podesta found himself apologizing to co-workers, friends, former Cabinet secretaries. Even when the contents of the leaked messages seemed innocuous, new annoyances would arise. WikiLeaks hadnt redacted the correspondence to protect privacy, leaving the cellphone numbers of campaign staffers for the world to view. In the middle of meetings, staffers would find their devices vibrating incessantly; strangers would fill their voicemails with messages like I hope youre raped in prison. Identity thieves quickly circled Podesta, attempting to claim his Social Security benefits and applying for credit cards in his name. Despite a political career that has permitted him to whisper into the ears of presidents, the legendarily frugal Podesta had commuted to New York on Vamoose, a discount bus line. A fraudster exploited the hack to steal the points he had accumulated in the Vamoose rewards program.

As Podesta revisited these painful moments, he claimed that hed stoically persisted in their face: I kept going on television. I kept raising money. I kept traveling with Hillary and President Clinton. I kept doing everything that I had been doing. But these were the closing weeks of an election that would turn on fewer than 80,000 votes spread across three states. For a campaign that arguably didnt invest its resources properly in the final stretch, the question must be asked: How badly did the Russians throw the campaign off its game? The least visible damage of the hack might have been the most decisive.

In the years since the Podesta hack, Microsofts Tom Burt has continually battled its perpetrators. As the man charged with safeguarding the security of Windows, Word, and his companys other software, he has developed a feel for the GRUs rhythms and habits. Through Microsofts work with political parties and campaigns around the worldthe company offers them training and sells them security software at a discountBurt has accumulated lengthy dossiers on past actions.

What hes noticed is that attacks tend to begin on the furthest fringes of a campaign. A standard GRU operation starts with think-tank fellows, academics, and political consultants. These people and institutions typically have weak cybersecurity fortifications, the penetration of which serves dual purposes. As the GRU pores through the inboxes of wonks and professors, it gathers useful intelligence about a campaign. But the hacked accounts also provide platforms for a more direct assault. Once inside, the GRU will send messages from the hacked accounts. The emails come from a trusted source, and carry a plausible message. According to Burt, It will say something like Saw this great article on the West Bank that you should review, and its got a link to a PDF. You click on it, and now your campaign network is infected. (Although Burt wont discuss specific institutions, he wrote a blog post last year describing attacks on the German Marshall Fund and the European offices of the Aspen Institute.)

Podesta fell victim to a generic spear-phishing attack: a spoofed security warning urging him to change his Gmail password. Many of us might like to think were sophisticated enough to avoid such a trap, but the Russians have grown adept at tailoring bespoke messages that could ensnare even the most vigilant target. Emails arrive from a phony address that looks as if it belongs to a friend or colleague, but has one letter omitted. One investigator told me that hes noticed that Russians use details gleaned from Facebook to script tantalizing messages. If a campaign consultant has told his circle of friends about an upcoming bass-fishing trip, the GRU will package its malware in an email offering discounts on bass-fishing gear.

Many of these techniques are borrowed from Russian cybercrime syndicates, which hack their way into banks and traffic in stolen credit cards. Burt has seen these illicit organizations using technologies that he believes will soon be imported to politics. For instance, new synthetic-audio software allows hackers to mimic a voice with convincing verisimilitude. Burt told me, In the cybercrime world, youre starting to see audio phishes, where somebody gets a voicemail message from their boss, for example, saying, Hey, I need you to transfer this money to the following account right away. It sounds just like your boss and so you do it.

What the Russians cant obtain from afar, they will attempt to pilfer with agents on the ground. The same GRU unit that hacked Podesta has allegedly sent operatives to Rio de Janeiro, Kuala Lumpur, and The Hague to practice what is known as close-access hacking. Once on the ground, they use off-the-shelf electronic equipment to pry open the Wi-Fi network of whomever theyre spying on.

The Russians, in other words, take risks few other nations would dare. They are willing to go to such lengths because theyve reaped such rich rewards from hacking. Of all the Russian tactics deployed in 2016, the hacking and leaking of documents did the most immediate and palpable damagedistracting attention from the Access Hollywood tape, and fueling theories that the Democratic Party had rigged its process to squash Bernie Sanderss campaign.

In 2020, the damage could be greater still. Podesta told me that when he realized his email had been breached, he feared that the hackers would manufacture embarrassing or even incriminating emails and then publish them alongside the real ones. Its impossible to know their reasoning, but Russian hackers made what would prove to be a clever decision not to alter Podestas email. Many media outlets accepted whatever emails WikiLeaks published without pausing to verify every detail, and they werent punished for their haste. The Podesta leaks thus established a precedent, an expectation that hacked material is authenticperhaps the most authentic version of reality available, an opportunity to see past a campaigns messaging and spin and read its innermost thoughts.

In fact, the Russians have no scruples about altering documents. In 2017, hackers with links to the GRU breached the inboxes of French President Emmanuel Macrons campaign staffers. The contents were rather banal, filled with restaurant reservations and trivial memos. Two days before these were released, other documents surfaced on internet message boards. Unlike the emails, these were pure fabrications, which purported to show that Macron had used a tax haven in the Cayman Islands. The timing of their release, however, gave them credibility. It was natural to assume that they had been harvested from the email hack, too. The Macron leaks suggested a dangerous new technique, a sinister mixing of the hacked and the fabricated intended to exploit the electorates hunger for raw evidence and faith in purloined documents.

In the spring of 2015, trolls in St. Petersburg peered at the feed of a webcam that had been furtively placed in New York City. Sitting in front of a computer screen on the second floor of a squat concrete office building, the trolls waited to see if they could influence the behavior of Americans from the comfort of Russian soil.

The men worked for a company bankrolled by Yevgeny Prigozhin, a bald-headed hot-dog vendor turned restaurateur, known to the Russian press as Putins chef. In the kleptocratic system that is the Russian economy, men like Prigozhin profit from their connections to Putin and maintain their inner-circle status by performing missions on his behalf. The operation in St. Petersburg was run by the Internet Research Agency, a troll farm serving the interests of the Kremlin. (Prigozhin has denied any involvement with the IRA.)

The IRA is an heir to a proud Russian tradition. In the Soviet Unions earliest days, the state came to believe that it could tip the world toward revolution through psychological warfare and deception, exploiting the divisions and weaknesses of bourgeois society. When it was assigned this task, the KGB referred to its program by the bureaucratic yet ominous name Active Measures. It pursued this work with artistic verve. It forged letters from the Ku Klux Klan that threatened to murder African athletes at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles. It fomented conspiracies about the CIAthat the agency had orchestrated the spread of the AIDS virus in a laboratory and plotted the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. Some of these KGB schemes were harebrained. But as one defector to the West put it, more Americans believed the Soviet version of JFKs murder than the Warren Report.

The IRA has updated the principles of Active Measures for the digital age. On social media, disinformation can flourish like never before. Whereas the KGB once needed to find journalistic vehicles to plant their storiesusually the small-audience fringes of the radical pressFacebook and Twitter hardly distinguished between mainstream outlets and clickbait upstarts. And many of the new platforms were designed to manipulate users, to keep them engaged for as long as possible. Their algorithms elevated content that fueled panic and anger.

With the New York webcam, the IRA was testing a hunch: that, through the miracle of social media, it could now toy with Americans as if they were marionettes. As the political scientist Thomas Rid recounts in his powerful new history, Active Measures, a post on Facebook promised that free hot dogs would be available to anyone who arrived on a specific corner at a prescribed time. Back in St. Petersburg, IRA employees watched as New Yorkers arrived, looked at their phones in frustration, and skulked away.

The ruse was innocuous, but it proved a theory that could be put to far more nefarious ends: Social media had made it possible, at shockingly low cost, for Russians to steer the emotions and even movements of Americans. No study has quantified how many votes have been swayed by the 10 million tweets that the IRA has pumped into the digital world; no metric captures how its posts on Facebook and Instagram altered Americas emotional valence as it headed to the polls in 2016. In the end, the IRAs menagerie of false personas and fusillades of splenetic memes were arguably more effective at garnering sensationalistic headlines than shifting public opinion. For their part, the IRAs minions immodestly credited themselves with having tilted the trajectory of history. The U.S. government obtained an email from an IRA employee describing the scene at the St. Petersburg office on Election Night: When around 8 a.m. the most important result of our work arrived, we uncorked a tiny bottle of champagne took one gulp each and looked into each others eyes We uttered almost in unison: We made America great.

Having run a noisy operation in 2016, the IRA has since learned to modulate itself. Its previous handiwork, much of which was riddled with poor syntax and grammatical errors, hardly required a discerning eye to identify. These days, the IRA takes care to avoid such sloppiness. Now, when they want to, IRA trolls can make themselves inconspicuous.

Relying on this quieter approach, the IRA has carried the theory of its hot-dog experiment into American political life. When white supremacists applied for a permit to hold a march in 2018 to commemorate the first anniversary of their protests in Charlottesville, Virginia, a Facebook group organized a counterprotest in Washington, D.C. The group was called the Resisters. Its administrators, who went by the names Mary and Natasha, recruited a coterie of enthusiastic organizers to promote the rally. When Facebook took down the Resisters pagenoting its ties to IRA accounts, and implying that Mary and Natasha were fictitious creationsAmerican leftists were shocked to learn that they had apparently been hatching plans with foreign trolls. According to The New York Times, they were also furious with Facebook: Whether or not the page was a Russian ploy, it had become a venue for real Americans to air their real grievances. In fact, it was hard to pinpoint where the Active Measures ended and the genuine action beganthe sort of tradecraft that the KGB would have admired.

Although the IRA might practice stealth when the operation demands, in other circumstances it will deploy raw bluster. Starting in 2017, it launched a sustained effort to exaggerate the specter of its interference, a tactic that social-media companies call perception hacking. Its trolls were instructed to post about the Mueller report and fan the flames of public anger over the blatant interference it revealed. On the day of the 2018 midterm elections, a group claiming to be the IRA published a grandiloquent manifesto on its website that declared: Soon after November 6, you will realize that your vote means nothing. We decide who you vote for and what candidates will win or lose. Whether you vote or not, there is no difference as we control the voting and counting systems. Remember, your vote has zero value. We are choosing for you.

The claim was absurd, but the posturing had a purpose. If enough Americans come to believe that Russia can do whatever it wants to our democratic processes without consequence, that, too, increases cynicism about American democracy, and thereby serves Russian ends. As Laura Rosenberger, a former National Security Council staffer under Obama who runs the Alliance for Securing Democracy, put it, They would like us to see a Russian under every bed.

Judging by this years presidential-primary campaign, they have been successful in this effort. When the Iowa Democratic Party struggled to implement new technology used to tally results for the states caucus, television panelists, Twitter pundits, and even a member of Congress speculated about the possibility of hacking, despite a lack of evidence to justify such loose talk. American incompetence had been confused for a plot against America.

As the outlines of the IRAs efforts began to emerge in the months following the 2016 election, Facebook at first refused to acknowledge the problem. The companys defensiveness called attention to its laissez-faire attitude toward the content that it elevated in peoples News Feeds. Facebook found itself flayed by congressional committees, its inner workings exposed by investigative journalists. Ostensibly it had been Alex Stamoss job to prevent the last attack, and now he faced another wave of disinformation, with midterm elections fast approaching. Stamos worried that, in the absence of an orchestrated defense, his company, as well as the nation, would repeat the mistakes of 2016.

In the spring of 2018, he invited executives from the big tech companies and leaders of intelligence agencies to Facebooks headquarters in Menlo Park, California. As he thought about it, Stamos was surprised that such a summit hadnt been organized sooner. What shocked him more was a realization he had as the meeting convened: Few of these people even knew one another. People who ran different agencies working on foreign interference met for the first time at Menlo Park, even though they were 10 Metro stops away in D.C., he told me. The normal collaborative process in government didnt exist on this issue.

Stamoss summit succeeded in spurring cooperation. Prior to the meeting, one tech company would identify and disable Russian accounts but fail to warn its competitors, allowing the same trolls to continue operating with impunity. Over the course of 2018, the tech industry gradually began acting in concert. The lead investigators on the threat-intelligence teams at 30 companiesincluding Facebook, Verizon, and Redditjoined a common channel on Slack, the messaging platform. When one company spies a nascent operation, it can now ring a bell for the others. This winter, Facebook and Twitter jointly shut down dozens of accounts associated with a single residential address in Accra, Ghana, where the Russians had set up a troll factory and hired local 20-somethings to impersonate African Americans and stoke online anger.

Yet this remains a game of cat and mouse in which the mice enjoy certain advantages. Despite the engineering prowess of the social-media companies, they havent yet built algorithms capable of reliably identifying coordinated campaigns run by phony Russian accounts. In most instances, their algorithms will suggest the inauthenticity of certain accounts. Those data points become a lead, which is then passed along to human investigators.

Facebook has several dozen employees on its threat-intelligence team, many of them alumni of the three-letter agencies in Washington. Still, the tech companies rely heavily on law enforcement for tips. Facebook and Twitter have frequent check-ins with the FBI. Without the bureau, Facebook might have missed an IRA video filled with lies about Russian tampering in the midterm elections. After a heads-up from the government, Facebook blocked the IRA from uploading the video before it ever appeared on its site, using the same technique that it deploys to suppress Islamic State snuff videos and child pornography. Rising from their denialist crouch, the social-media companies have proved themselves capable of aggressive policing; after treating the IRA as a harmless interloper, they came to treat it with the sort of disdain they otherwise reserve for terrorists and deviants.

Devising strategies for thwarting the last attack is far easier than preventing the next one. Even if Russian disinformation can be tamped down on social mediaand the efforts here, on balance, are encouragingthere are other ways, arguably more consequential, to manipulate American politics, and scant defense against them.

On an early-March afternoon, I typed the Federal Election Commission as a destination into Uber and was disgorged at a building the agency hasnt occupied for two years. The antiquated address placed me on course to arrive half an hour late for an appointment with Ellen Weintraub, the longest-serving and most vociferous member of the commission nominally assigned to block the flow of foreign money into political campaigns. When I called her office to inform her of my tardiness, her assistant told me not to worry: Weintraubs schedule was wide open that afternoon. In fact, for the past six months the FEC hadnt conducted much official business. Only three Senate-approved commissioners were installed in their jobs, even though the agency should have six and needs four for a quorum.

Weintraub, a Democrat, has an impish streak. Near the beginning of the FECs hibernation, she called out a fellow commissioner who had blocked the publication of a memo that seemed to criticize the Trump campaign for its 2016 meeting with a Russian lawyerthen posted the memo in a 57-part thread on Twitter. Weintraub has grown accustomed to her colleagues ignoring her questions about the presence of Russian and other illicit money in American campaigns. When the commission received a complaint suggesting that the FBI was investigating the National Rifle Association as a conduit for Russian money, she asked her fellow commissioners for permission to call the FBI, to, as she put it, see if they have interesting information they want to share. But they said, Were not going to call the FBI. They didnt want to do anything.

Outside Weintraubs office, the subject of Russias illicit financing of campaigns hardly provokes any attention. The Alliance for Securing Democracy was the only organization I could find that comprehensively tracks the issue. It has collected examples of Russian money flowing into campaigns around the world: a 9.4-million-euro loan made to the French nationalist Marine Le Pens party; operatives arriving in Madagascar before an election with backpacks full of cash to buy TV ads on behalf of Russias preferred candidate and to pay journalists to cover his rallies.

Or take a case closer to home: Lev Parnas and Igor Frumanthe Soviet-born Americans who worked with Rudy Giuliani in his search for politically damaging material to deploy against former Vice President Joe Bidenwere charged with conspiring to funnel money from an unnamed Russian into American campaigns. Some of the cases cited by the Alliance for Securing Democracy are circumstantial, but they form a pattern. Since 2016, the group has identified at least 60 instances of Russia financing political campaigns beyond its borders. (The Kremlin denies meddling in foreign elections.)

When I asked Weintraub if she had a sense of how many such examples exist in American politics, she replied, We know theres stuff going on out there, and were just not doing anything. Since the Supreme Courts 2010 Citizens United decision, which lifted restrictions on campaign finance, hardly any systemic checks preclude foreigners from subsidizing politicians using the cover of anonymous shell companies. With that decision, the high court opened the door for Russia to pursue one of its favored methods of destabilizing global democracy. By covertly financing campaigns, the Russians have helped elevate extremist politicians and nurture corrosive social movements. Everyone knows there are loopholes in our campaign-finance system, Weintraub said. Why would we think that our adversaries, who have demonstrated a desire to muck around in our democracy, wouldnt be using those loopholes, too?

Problems of inattention, problems of coordination, and deep concerns about Novemberthese themes came up over and over in my interviews for this story. Indeed, at times everyone seemed to be sounding the same alarm. H. R. McMaster, who briefly served as Donald Trumps national security adviser, sounded it when he proposed a new task force to focus the governments often shambolic efforts to safeguard the election. Adam Schiff, the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, sounded it when he realized how poorly the bureaucracy was sharing the information it was gathering about the Russian threat.

There was a moment that crystallized Schiffs sense of this disjointedness. In the summer of 2018, he attended a security conference in Aspen, Colorado, where Tom Burt revealed that Microsoft had detected Russian phishing attacks targeting Democratic senatorial candidates. When I went back to Washington, Schiff told me, I asked agency heads within the [intelligence community] whether they were aware of this. The answer was no. That the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee had to learn this elemental fact about his own branch of government at a public gathering is troubling; that the people charged with protecting the country didnt know it is flabbergasting.

The sprawling federal bureaucracy has never been particularly adept at the kind of coordination necessary to anticipate a wily adversarys next move. But there is another reason for the governments alarmingly inadequate response: a president who sees attempts to counter the Russia threat as a personal affront.

After McMaster was fired, having made little if any progress on Russia, the director of national intelligence, Dan Coats, took up the cause, installing in his office an election-security adviser named Shelby Pierson. This past February, Pierson briefed Schiffs committee that the Russians were planning to interfere in the upcoming election, and that Trump remained Moscows preferred candidate. Anyone who follows the president on Twitter knows this is a subject that provokes his fury. Indeed, the day after Piersons testimony, the president upbraided Coatss successor, Joseph Maguire, for Piersons assessment. A week later, he fired Maguire and installed in his place the ambassador to Germany, Richard Grenell, a loyalist with no intelligence experience. Grenell immediately set about confirming the wisdom behind Trumps choice. Three weeks into his tenure, a senior intelligence official in the Office of the DNI informed the Senate that Piersons assessment was mistaken.

Trump had graphically illustrated his recurring message to the intelligence community: He doesnt want to hear warnings about Russian interference. Mark Warner, the highest-ranking Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee, told me, A day doesnt go by that I dont hear from someone in the intelligence community saying, Oh my gosh, were worried about integrity, were worried about morale, were worried about willingness to speak truth to power. I asked Warner whether he could still trust the intelligence about Russia he receivedwhether he has faith that the government will render an accurate portrait of the Russian threat to the upcoming presidential election. As he considered his answer, he leaned toward me. I dont know the answer to that, he replied, and that bothers me.

Vladimir Putin dreams of discrediting the American democratic system, and he will never have a more reliable ally than Donald Trump. A democracy cant defend itself if it cant honestly describe the attacks against it. But the president hasnt just undermined his own countrys defenseshe has actively abetted the adversarys efforts. If Russia wants to tarnish the political process as hopelessly rigged, it has a bombastic amplifier standing behind the seal of the presidency, a man who reflexively depicts his opponents as frauds and any system that produces an outcome he doesnt like as fixed. If Russia wants to spread disinformation, the president continually softens an audience for it, by instructing the public to disregard authoritative journalism as the prevarications of a traitorous elite and by spouting falsehoods on Twitter.

In 2020, Russia might not need to push the U.S. for it to suffer a terrible election-year tumble. Even without interventions from abroad, it is shockingly easy to imagine how a pandemic might provide a pretext for indefinitely delaying an election or how this president, narrowly dispatched at the polls, might refuse to accept defeat. But restraint wouldnt honor Russias tradition of Active Measures. And there may never be a moment quite so ripe for taking the old hashtag out of storage and giving it a triumphalist turn. #DemocracyRIP.

This article appears in the June 2020 print edition with the headline The 2016 Election Was Just a Dry Run.

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Putin Is Well on His Way to Stealing the Next Election - The Atlantic

The CoinDesk 50: Bitmain, the Behemoth of Bitcoin Mining – CoinDesk

Founded in 2013, the Beijing-based Bitmain Technology remains at the center of the crypto economy. With its flagship AntMiner bitcoin mining equipment still dominating the hardware market and its mining pools accounting for about a quarter of the Bitcoin networks computing power, it retains a uniquely powerful place in the ecosystem of by far the largest cryptocurrency and blockchain project.

Thats not to say it isnt also controversial. Its vocal support for a Bitcoin hard fork (Bitcoin Cash) in 2017, following contentious community disagreement, won the company, and its masterminds, many enemies.

This post is part of the CoinDesk 50, an annual selection of the most innovative and consequential projects in the blockchain industry. See thefull list here.

Over the years, Bitmain has been involved in many controversial developments to the point that the Chinese crypto community refers to its foes as the mining avengers. In 2017, Bitmain filed a lawsuit against Yang Zuoxing, the former design chief behind Bitmains AntMiner S9 who started a rival miner manufacturer MicroBT, over patent infringement. But Bitmain lost the case eventually.

Then in 2018, it brought another lawsuit over non-compete violation against the former creators of Bitmans mining pool BTC.com, who left the company to start a rival service PoolIn, which has become the worlds top two bitcoin mining pool by total hash rate.

Bitmains story started with Wu Jihan, one of the earliest bitcoin evangelists in China, translating Satoshi Nakamotos white paper to Chinese in 2011.

He invested in probably the worlds first known bitcoin-denominated initial public offering in 2012. It was a project started by Jiang Xinyu, a.k.a Friedcat., who was crowdfunding bitcoin to roll out an application-specific integrated circuit just for bitcoin mining.

The hardware sold well initially and sensational success followed. In 2013, Wu, with a finance and psychology degree from Chinas prestigious Peking University, decided to start his own company to manufacture mining hardware. He was joined by Zhan Ketuan, his partner on the technology side, who, in six years, would find himself ousted from the company in a coup started by Wu.

Bitcoins last halving event in the summer 2016 marked the beginning of two years of extraordinary growth at Bitmain.

In 2017 alone, still only four years old, it made $1 billion in profits. It made another $1 billion for the first six months in 2018 and then went on a high-profile fundraise in the summer, netting $700 million from external shareholders with a bet. The deal is this: if Bitmain cant go public within five years since the fundraise at an agreed term, external investors could require the company to redeem all of their investment with an interest.

At that time, Bitmain was boasting a hardware market share of nearly 80 percent. So the agreed term for the IPO was nothing but ambitious: raising at least $500 million at a valuation of no less than $18 billion.

So much has changed in 2019, since its first IPO attempt failed in March in Hong Kong.

Its rising rival, MicroBT, whose founder won over Bitmains patent infringement lawsuit, is seriously undermining Bitmains market dominance.

In 2019, Bitmains mining pools BTC.com and Antpool lost the top two spots to F2Pool and Poolin, the latter of which still has an ongoing case with Bitmain over alleged non-compete violation.

When Wu Jihan returned in a coup in November 2019 to kick out his founding partner Zhan, he told his people hes back to save the sinking ship. Whether his tough comeback will work as he expected is yet to be proven, although it appears prepared to roll out more powerful equipment to weather the upcoming halving.

It remains to be seen if Bitmain can replicate the sensational success it once had following the 2016 bitcoin halving.

The leader in blockchain news, CoinDesk is a media outlet that strives for the highest journalistic standards and abides by a strict set of editorial policies. CoinDesk is an independent operating subsidiary of Digital Currency Group, which invests in cryptocurrencies and blockchain startups.

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The CoinDesk 50: Bitmain, the Behemoth of Bitcoin Mining - CoinDesk