#美国就业数据表现强劲超出预期 Yesterday, we were still hoping to break new highs, but a heavy blow was delivered unexpectedly. The total network hash rate of Bitcoin suddenly slowed down — within just 48 hours, it dropped nearly 30%, setting a new record for the largest single decline since the halving. Behind this sharp decline, there is a mysterious "gray hash power" force. When U.S. non-farm payroll data exceeds expectations, market liquidity rapidly contracts, and large hash power mining pools go offline one after another. The price fluctuations of $BTC and $ETH reflect that this round of impact is far more intense than most people anticipated. What is the logic behind this? Perhaps it is those invisible, non-mainstream hash power groups that chose to collectively withdraw at critical moments.
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SerumSquirrel
· 10h ago
A 30% drop in 48 hours? Things are really getting serious now. The term "gray computing power" sounds suspicious.
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UnluckyValidator
· 14h ago
Coming again? A 30% drop in 48 hours, this time really brutal. The Gray Hash Power Group really threw in the towel at a critical moment, truly ruthless.
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SorryRugPulled
· 14h ago
The term "gray computing power" sounds like a Hollywood script... Is it true or not? Could it be that they're shifting the blame to some mysterious tycoon again?
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AlphaBrain
· 12-18 10:50
The term "gray computing power" is a bit far-fetched; it feels like a story being made up... The real issue is still liquidity crunch combined with emotional breakdowns.
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SelfMadeRuggee
· 12-17 08:20
The gray mining power collective has run away, this tactic is really brilliant. A 30% drop in 48 hours, where is the promised halving market?
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LiquidationTherapist
· 12-17 08:18
It's the same "gray computing power" explanation again, and it's starting to give me ear calluses... But this 30% drop is indeed a bit harsh. As soon as the non-farm payrolls came out, everyone collectively went offline. The script is quite well-written.
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SocialAnxietyStaker
· 12-17 08:13
Gray computing power collectively going offline? That's too outrageous, feels like the mining community is putting on a show.
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MetaLord420
· 12-17 08:09
A 30% drop in 48 hours? Things are getting interesting now. The term "gray computing power" sounds outrageous; it feels like someone is making up stories.
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DogeBachelor
· 12-17 07:51
The term "gray computing power" is ridiculous; it's just shifting blame... Basically, it's just big players running away and retail investors taking the fall—old tricks like always.
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NoStopLossNut
· 12-17 07:51
Ridiculous, just because the non-farm data exploded, the computing power directly collapsed, with a 30% drop—this is too brutal... The mysterious "gray computing power" sounds like something out of a spy movie, feels like someone is playing tricks behind the scenes.
#美国就业数据表现强劲超出预期 Yesterday, we were still hoping to break new highs, but a heavy blow was delivered unexpectedly. The total network hash rate of Bitcoin suddenly slowed down — within just 48 hours, it dropped nearly 30%, setting a new record for the largest single decline since the halving. Behind this sharp decline, there is a mysterious "gray hash power" force. When U.S. non-farm payroll data exceeds expectations, market liquidity rapidly contracts, and large hash power mining pools go offline one after another. The price fluctuations of $BTC and $ETH reflect that this round of impact is far more intense than most people anticipated. What is the logic behind this? Perhaps it is those invisible, non-mainstream hash power groups that chose to collectively withdraw at critical moments.