Blockware sued over alleged misrepresentation of miners performance

The plaintiff claims losses of $250,000 and seeks compensatory and punitive damages. 6495 Total views 11 Total shares Listen to article 0:00 News Ho-ho-ho! Get Limited Holiday Trait!Collect this article as NFT London-based Faes & Company filed a complaint against crypto mining firm Blockware Solutions LLC on Dec. 17, claiming it misrepresented the performance capability of its miners and lacked adequate power access to keep the machines running.

Plaintiffs allege losses of $250,000 and are seeking compensatory and punitive damages.

According to the complaint, the parties entered into contracts in October 2021 for Faes to buy $525,000 worth of Bitcoin miners and related hosting services. As part of the agreement, Blockware would host Faes’ miners at one of its server facilities, which it allegedly owns and operates for a monthly hosting fee and energy costs.

Related: Public Bitcoin mining companies plagued with $4B of collective debt

The plaintiff alleges that at the time of the agreement, however, Blockware did not actually own or operate a facility to host the miners and was not capable of doing so reliably. It also noted:Further, to the extent Blockware had access to third-party facilities to host and manage the miners, the facilities lacked reliable power (likely due to a limiting contractual arrangement with their energy supplier), so the operation of the miners was and is regularly subject to interruption or curtailment. As a result, Faes miners under Blockwares management and control have experienced prolonged downtime and inoperability due to lack of power, resulting in significant loss of revenue.

Faes also noted in the complaint that ordered the machines to be delivered and hosted in Blockwares facilities in January, when a Bitcoin (BTC)was worth over $45,000. The rigs, however, only came online in April. The suit also noted that:Problems with downtime began approximately two days after Faes miners first came online and have persisted throughout 2022, resulting in numerous complaints and support tickets by Faes. Despite these problems, Blockware hosts and updates a public status page that shows persistent high uptime at its facilities, including the Pennsylvania facility where Faes miners have been hosted, showing consistent 100% uptime for the preceding 90 days.

Despite the displayed 100% uptime, a look at the incident history shows approximately 50 days of extended power curtailment at the Pennsylvania facility during September and October, noted the complaint.

Blockware Solutions did not immediately respond to Cointelegraphs requests for comments.

Bitcoin mining companies had been hit hard by the crypto winter and a spike in energy costs. Approximately $2.6 billion is owed cumulatively by just the top 10 Bitcoin mining debtors, according to Hashrate Index. #Mining #Law #Business #Bitcoin Mining Related News 4 legislative predictions for crypto in 2023 Argo Blockchain reports insufficient funds, ‘no assurance’ it can avoid Chapter 11 bankruptcy Nasdaq warns Bitcoin mining firm Bitfarms about share price deficiency Creditor offers Bitcoin miner Core Scientific $72M to avoid bankruptcy How hard has this bear market been for Bitcoin mining? Watch Market Talks on Cointelegraph