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Scam Hilarity: Suspect ponzi claims to be mining bitcoin w/ perpetual motion engine

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Woo, short for woo-woo, is a term used to describe something that is completely implausible, yet explained with pseudo-scientific and potentially-plausible jargon that can fool innocent sheeple. You can encounter woo in all sorts of places, and most of the time they do no harm. However, when they show up in medicine and finance, they can do quite a bit of harm indeed. And today, we'll discuss the a new wrinkle... physical woo on top of financial woo.

But let me start from the beginning.

HYIP, or "high yield investment program" is a form of ponzi scheme that promised impossibly high yields. Claimed returns like 1% per day is not uncommon.

Some of them are pretty transparent in being a scheme, while others may adopt weasel language like "crowdfunding" or "charity". Yet others turn to woo explanations for their ability to pay such high yields that makes absolutely no sense when examined in detail. Frankly, it failed to pass the smell test... If they have techniques that can reliably generate such income, just put down a mortgage or borrow X dollars from credit card or bank, and they'll make it back in no time. Right? Yet there have been, for decades, schemes that attempt to explain their ability to generate such returns, with bogus excuses such as "bridge loans" [DOJ], "P2P lending" [CNBC], "forex" [DOJ], "arbitrage" [wikipedia], "penny auctions" [CBSnews], "prime bank" [SEC] and so on.

The latest buzzword is cryptocurrency, and it's no wonder ponzi schemes have latched onto it as the latest craze, by incorporating something people who have heard of, but do not understand, as their woo. Some launch their own cryptocurrency (that nobody would ever use), yet others latch onto the idea of cryptomining, the idea that you can "mine" bitcoin and other currencies.

While cryptomining is real, it is hard to make money in such because the hardware to mine and the electricity to run them, not to mention cooling, are expensive as well. It may be possible to run such in China and Eastern Europe, where electricity is cheap (by government mandate) and hardware and labor are cheap, esp. if one exploit scale by running massive crypto-mine.

So the latest crypto-woo is launched by a company called USI-Tech, which used to be Forex HYIP (see above), but they've since switched to Cryptomining as their new woo. Recently in London, they've shown their latest "innovation"... they can create "virtually FREE energy" to run their cryptomining machines.
USI-Tech claims they can create "virtually free energy",
but they only want to run cryptomining rigs with it

Perpetual motion machine doesn't exist, as it violates law of thermodynamics. Yet there are plenty of kooks who claim they made one, or claim the knowledge was suppressed by the evil government or energy consortiums or something. Though you had to admit, using one to power cryptomining is rather cute.

But what does this thing look like?





A few minutes of waffling later, they show this:


So it's not even installed yet. But let's zoom in a bit, noting three things:

The "Asymmetric Permanent Magnet Motor/Generator"



The "Hydrogen Fuel / Electric Generator"



And the presenter

who was named as "Evan Ahern"

Let's start in reverse order.

Who is Evan Ahern? Google says... "Las Vegas equipment rental". Here's his LinkedIn Profile:


Ahern Rental rents industrial and construction equipment.

Google yielded a slightly better picture from Alumni UNLV website




Looks reasonably close to the blurry picture above, but hey, I don't have a close-up. Call it... 75%? But really, construction guy is suddenly head of product development? Hey, I don't know the guy. So that's a maybe?



Next, let's look at that Hydrogen whatever...  Note what it says: "sHHO (stabilized) flow diagram"

HHO is water, i.e. H2O. What "HHO Generator" is, however, is electrolysis of water into HO and H, into a mixture known as "Brown's Gas or "hydroxy". And while the "principle" is sound, in that HHO gas can be used for fuel, the NET ENERGY is NEGATIVE, i.e. it takes more electricity to make the gas than the gas can be burned for. It's been debunked over and over, even by Mythbusters! Now the woo's been applied to bitcoin mining?



Oh, but it gets better! Let's look up "asymmetric permanent magnet generator". Near the top of the search results is probably "Tom Bearden" at cheniere.org  and the site was just some ranting about the suppression of discovery.

What that website will not tell you is "Thomas E. Bearden" claimed to have invented several perpetual motion machines, which he calls "overunity systems". He'll gladly sell you a "documentary" showing his discoveries.  His "masters degree" is from a diploma mill. He calls asymmetric permanent magnet generator "magnetic wankel engine", and claimed it had been suppressed and its inventor silenced via assassination.



But let's just try the "smell test" does this story even make sense?

Come on, it doesn't. If they managed to create a perpetual motion machine, they can sell it to Tesla or GE or US government or even the Saudis for bajillion dollars. They'll be set for life. But instead, they want to apply perpetual energy machines and "run engine on water" tech to bitcoin miners?!


It's hilarious. Really. Where do they come up with this stuff?




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