This illegal Bitaxe clone is quietly dominating Asia.
Today I had lunch with the guy behind it š
Heās a young bitcoin entrepreneur from Shenzhen, China.
Quiet, humbleābut running a serious operation: large-scale self-mining, hosting, and full-scale manufacturing of mining hardware and spare parts.
Heās been in the space since 2017.
Genuinely believes in bitcoinās mission.
LuckyMiner started as a hobby in late 2023.
He said he wanted to help more people get into miningānot really to make a profit.
But in early 2024 the demand exploded.
Thousands sold.
BREAKING THE LICENSE.
Bitaxe is open source under CERN-OHL-S-2.0āwhich means any modifications must be published.
So why do it?
I asked him directly. He didnāt get angry or defensive. He said:
1ļøā£ Retail customers in Asia donāt care about open source, and the Bitaxe brand isnāt suited for the local market
2ļøā£ His team is juggling too many projectsāreleasing modifications is low priority. Their time is too valuable
Not great reasonsābut they felt honest.
š Legit Bitaxes:
They now manufacture open-source Bitaxes tooābut only for B2B clients, fully license-compliant. LuckyMiners are sold direct to retail customers.
š Copying Braiins:
They copied us tooāand admitted it to my face. But thatās a story for next time. Follow me so you donāt miss it š
Whatās next?
As sales kept growing, they added a Litecoin version earlier this year.
And they plan to keep expandingāwith more form factors and higher production volumes.
But he says chip availability is the biggest bottleneck.
CHIPS ARE THE PROBLEM.
Everywhere.
Or ratherānot having chips available for purchase is the story here for me.
Hope we find a solution.
Anywaysā¦
I donāt support his decisions.
But I have to admitāheās a really nice guy, bitcoiner at heart, and I appreciated his honest answer and perspective on the Asian market.
Now you know the story behind the most controversial mini-miner on the market.
Curious to hear your thoughts.

