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What Is Bitcoin Mining? How to Prevent Bitcoin Scams?

Appteng May 14, 2025

Bitcoin mining, in and of itself, is not harmful and involves using a computer to solve difficult mathematical equations for the user to earn bitcoin. The user earns bitcoin by verifying transactions on the blockchain, which is a digital ledger—similar to a bankbook—that keeps track of all the transactions of a given cryptocurrency. Each time a hash is solved, the user who solves it earns bitcoin. 

However, to solve the math problems, a computer has to run nonstop, expending a lot of central processing unit (CPU) power. This takes a lot of electricity. Hackers have begun hijacking other people’s computers to use them, their resources, and the user’s electricity to mine bitcoin, which the hacker can then cash in on.

Bitcoin mining uses malware. Hackers have written malware with the ability to access your computer and use its resources to mine bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. For the hacker to earn cryptocurrencies, they have to verify transactions on a blockchain. Cryptocurrencies depend on this to maintain solvency.

Each transaction generates an ID labeled with a hash. On the bitcoin blockchain, a hash is a 256-bit encryption, which is essentially a password. Each computer on the network tries to figure out the 256-bit password, and if it gets even one character wrong, the hash is not solved. Other computers work to verify the authenticity of the solutions the “winning” computer came up with. All of this work is rewarded with cryptocurrencies—in this case, bitcoin. 

In some cryptocurrency ecosystems, users also get voting rights in the system’s governance structure. This means they get to cast a vote regarding the decisions the development team makes about the future of the currency, its token, and how they will be used.

Although it is not hard for a computer to solve a hash, to do it fast enough so that the problem is solved before other users’ computers solve it, the computer has to be fast. But a fast computer is not enough. As the CPU tries to churn out an answer as quickly as possible, it has to fire billions of electrical impulses in a short period of time. To keep the computer from burning up, powerful fans are run constantly. This takes a lot of electricity. This is why hackers come after your computer—to bring it into one of their hijacked bitcoin mining pools.

A hacker installs bitcoin mining malware on hundreds of computers to divide the work among them. All of the computers become bitcoin miners verifying bitcoin transactions. Bitcoin mining calculators have calculated the electric draw of these operations, and they are enough to cause electric bills to spike, CPUs to burn up, and computers to completely fail.

Author
Appteng
Appteng
Appteng is a journalist and crypto analyst with years of experience covering digital assets. He specializes in breaking news, market trends, and blockchain innovations. Known for his accuracy and insightful analysis, Appteng brings clarity to the fast-paced world of crypto and Web3.
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