Chinese headmaster fired over secret coin mining at school

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Image copyrightHunan Transportation Channel/WeiboImage caption A total of nine mining rigs were found installed at the
school in Hunan A Chinese headmaster has been fired after a secret stack of crypto-currency mining machines was found
connected to his school's electricity supply.Teachers at the school in Hunan became suspicious of a whirring noise that continued day and
night, local media report.This led to the discovery of the machines, which were mining the crypto-currency Ethereum.They racked up an
electricity bill of 14,700 yuan (£1,600)
The excessive electricity consumption had previously been reported to the headmaster, Lei Hua, but he reportedly dismissed it as being
caused by air conditioners and heating devices.Mining crypto-currencies such as Bitcoin and Ethereum involves connecting computers, usually
specialised "mining machines", to the currency network.By providing computing power for validating transactions on that network,
mining-machine owners are rewarded with newly generated coins, making it a potentially lucrative exercise - especially when done at
scale.Media captionBitcoin explained: How do crypto-currencies workIn this case, a total of eight mining machines were installed in the
Hunan school's computer room between summer 2017 and summer 2018.The headmaster had originally spent 10,000 yuan on a single machine for use
at home, but allegedly decided to move it to the school after he saw how much electricity it consumed.The deputy headmaster also became
involved in the scheme and allegedly acquired a ninth machine for himself in January, which was also installed at the school.The computer
network in the building became overloaded as a result of the mining activity, according to reports, and this "interfered" with teaching.The
headmaster was fired in October and his deputy received an official warning.A local authority responsible for "discipline inspection" has
claimed the money that was made through the mining activities."The noise and heat of nine actively running mining machines would have been
very noticeable," said Matthew Hickey, a cyber-security expert at Hacker House."Sadly, stealing electricity is one way that people have
tried to maximize their revenue - by avoiding those costs it can drastically improve returns on a mining operation."Surreptitious
crypto-currency mining has been discovered elsewhere
In February, several scientists at a top-secret Russian nuclear warhead facility were arrested for allegedly mining Bitcoin with the
facility's supercomputers.