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fryguy | 9 years ago

Well if you use the Bitcoin network as a metric, there's roughly 3 billion GH/s (which is really two chained SHA1 in hardware), and realtimebitcoin.info claims this is ~2000 MW. If you compare that to the 9 billion GH that the shattered article claims are needed, then that indicates it would take a network equivalent in size to the Bitcoin network ~3 seconds and ~1'600 kWh. There's no indication how "lucky" a 9 billion GH collision is, so perhaps it would be longer or shorter based on the statistics.

Looking at it from the other direction, they claim 110 GPU-years. A GeForce GTX 1080 is claimed to be 180 W. That's 175'000 kWh. If you assume that dedicated hardware ASICs are 100x more power efficient than the card I claimed, that has at least a similar order of magnitude. To do it in an hour would take a million graphics cards, and ~200 MW.

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loup-vaillant|9 years ago

You have to add a couple thousand years of CPU computation. Though if ASIC can meaningfully replace those, they're as good as negligible…

gruez|9 years ago

>which is really two chained SHA1 in hardware

no it uses sha256