Bitcoin: The man searching for $347 million in a dumpsite

Bitcoin: The man searching for 7 million in a dumpsite

“Anyone who helps him find it, he says, is promised to be rewarded millions. The 35-year-old also offered to donate 25 percent of the potential findings — roughly 70 million dollars— to a “Covid Relief Fund” for his home city.”

It’s a nightmare scenario that might become increasingly common in a world of digital currency. A man threw away an old PC hard drive while doing a quick spring clean of his home in Newport Wales, UK, in 2013. Fast-forward almost a decade and he’s still desperately petitioning to be allowed to go through his local landfill.

The reason the man, 35-year-old IT engineer James Howells, wants to trawl through his local trash site is that the hard drive he threw out included a wallet with 7,500 Bitcoin.

At the time he threw out the hard drive, that amount of Bitcoin would have been worth 665 thousand dollars (500 thousand pounds). Today, it would have made him a millionaire, as it would be worth a total of 357 million dollars.

In an interview with The Guardian in 2013, Howells explained how he had been looking through the landfill, which is roughly the size of a football field.

“I had a word with one of the guys down there, explained the situation. And he actually took me out in his truck to where the landfill site is, the current ditch they’re working on. It’s about the size of a football field, and he said something from three or four months ago would be about three or four feet down,” Howells explained

Roughly $140 billion in ‘lost’ Bitcoin worldwide

Following initial scavenging efforts for the lost hard drive, Howells seemed resigned to losing the digital fortune. More recently, however, he has recruited local residents in Newport to help him search for the device.

Anyone who helps him find it, he says, is promised to be rewarded millions — if the hard drive is still readable, that is. The 35-year-old also offered to donate 25 percent of the potential findings — roughly 70 million dollars— to a “Covid Relief Fund” for his home city.

Unfortunately, the lost hard drive may never be found. According to a report earlier this year from CNBC, Howells was recently denied his request by the Newport City Council to look through the landfill with a group of volunteers, due to environmental concerns over the effects of unearthing so much garbage.

Howells isn’t the only crypto owner to face such a disastrous scenario. Earlier this year, The New York Times reported that roughly $140 billion in Bitcoin is “lost” due to owners who forgot their passwords from the early days of the cryptocurrency, or never backed up their wallets.

One father-son team of “ethical hackers” recently started a venture called Crypto Asset Recovery to help people in that scenario to rediscover their passwords via an interview process and an algorithm. If only they had an algorithm for searching through almost a decade’s worth of trash.

This article originally appeared in Nigeria Abroad

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