The hashpower rental marketplace NiceHash, which was hacked in Dec. 2022, says it may non be able to fulfill its pledge to fully reimburse affected users.

In a web log post published on Dec. eighteen, NiceHash said its repayment program would exist frozen at its current level of 82% successful reimbursement and that its promise to repay 100% of lost funds will non be realized "in the foreseeable future."

No time estimates for possible eventual repayment

Established in 2022, NiceHash is a marketplace that brokers between miners and investors, allowing owners of mining hardware to rent out their hash power to interested parties.

In Dec. 2022, the service lost over $threescore meg in Bitcoin (BTC) in a major hack. It afterward pledged to fully reimburse affected users, launching a repayment plan in February. 2022.

According to NiceHash, 82% of lost funds have by now been successfully reimbursed, yet despite having been committed to periodically repay the outstanding residual, the company now says it cannot uphold this delivery:

"We have been repaying the old balance to our users through our fees and thus cutting our income. Our income and thus Repayment program avails are subject area to taxation. The current state of the Repayment program is at 100,04% of the original loss value in our accounting books."

NiceCash adds that the decision was taken in lodge to allow information technology to stay in business with enough cash flow for the future development of its services.

The company says it will continue with the legal procedures tied to the repayment program and that should the market see "a positive development" in 2022, it will resume its reimbursement efforts.

All information regarding the repayment programme volition meanwhile remain visible in users' wallets, just every bit of now, the firm says information technology is unable to give any time estimates for possible eventual reimbursement.

Easy admission mining

This spring, as part of an overview of students' crypto mining, Cointelegraph reported on the popularity of Nicehash and similar services that offer a low-bulwark entry point to mining for those without access to sophisticated hardware.

Notwithstanding his access to "free" (campus) electricity, one interviewee — a Academy of Mississippi pharmaceutical sciences student — nonetheless told Cointelegraph he had somewhen been forced to abandon mining because of the continuously loftier strain on processing ability and "overinflated" GPU prices.