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A fortune in virtual currency has been lost at a landfill in Newport
On November 28, 2013 by Max Smolaks 0
A Welsh man has expressed his regret after throwing out a hard drive which
contained a forgotten cache of 7,500 bitcoins, worth more than 4 million at
today s prices.
James Howells mined the virtual currency on his laptop in 2009 when it was
trading for pennies, but today, one Bitcoin is valued at more than $1000. The
hard drive containing this sizeable fortune has been tracked to a landfill in
Newport, where it lies buried under four feet of rubbish. However, according to
experts, the storage device is pretty much impossible to retrieve.
Last month, a Norwegian citizen made the headlines thanks to a forgotten
investment he made in Bitcoin in 2009 that years later bought him a flat in
central Oslo.
The legend of Satoshi s gold
Huguette Roe
Bitcoins are a decentralised digital currency based on an open-source,
peer-to-peer Internet protocol, first introduced in 2009 by an anonymous
developer known under the alias Satoshi Nakamoto . It is not linked to any
real money, but traded on various electronic exchanges to establish its price.
The only way to generate new Bitcoins is through mathematically intensive
cryptography operations which require a lot of time and computational resources
the process better known as mining .
According to the Guardian, Howells, now an IT professional, mined his bitcoins
on a Dell laptop for a week, but stopped after his girlfriend complained that
the machine was running too hot. The laptop was eventually retired and taken
apart, but Howells kept the drive with his personal files.
This summer, he was cleaning out his desk, discovered the old drive and put it
in the bin, since he couldn t remember if it contained any important data.
Several months later came the horrific realisation that it stored a
cryptographic key for 7,500 bitcoins.
Contents of the drive were worth around 500,000 when it was sent to the
landfill. However, in the past three months, the typical price of Bitcoin
skyrocketed from about $100 ( 61) to more than $1000 ( 613) on Wednesday
afternoon, valuing the lost cache at more than 4 million.
After checking every corner of his house for a back-up, Howells actually
visited the landfill, where the employees told him the drive could be buried
under four feet of rubbish on a site the size of a football pitch.
Howells has set up a bitcoin wallet for donations in order to fund the search,
but admits he has all but abandoned hope of ever finding the encryption key.
There s a pot of gold there for someone, he said.