Russians held for 'mining bitcoin' at top nuclear lab

MOSCOW • Engineers at Russia's top nuclear research facility have been detained after they attempted to mine bitcoin on its computers, Russian news agencies reported on Friday.

Several employees at the Russian Federal Nuclear Centre in the city of Sarov have been detained after making "an attempt to use the work computing facilities for personal ends, including for so-called mining", a spokesman for the centre, Ms Tatiana Zalesskaya, told Interfax news agency.

"Their activities were stopped in time," she added. "The bungling miners have been detained by the competent authorities. As far as I know, a criminal case has been opened regarding them," she added, without saying how many were detained.

The centre is overseen by Rosatom, the Russian nuclear agency, and works on developing nuclear weapons.

Such attempts "at our enterprises will be harshly put down, this activity technically has no future and is punishable as a crime", the centre's spokesman said.

In 2011, the centre switched on a new supercomputer with a capacity of 1 petaflop, which at the time made it the 12th most powerful in the world, Russian television reported.

During the Cold War, Sarov was a top-secret city in the Nizhny Novgorod region, about 500km east of Moscow. Its Soviet era name was Arzamas-16. The centre was the birthplace of the Soviet Union's first nuclear weapons.

Sarov is still a closed city whose inhabitants are subject to travel restrictions.

Mr Vladimir Putin visited the nuclear research centre in 2012 while campaigning for the presidency.

AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Sunday Times on February 11, 2018, with the headline Russians held for 'mining bitcoin' at top nuclear lab. Subscribe