A special on-chain transfer has sparked heated discussion in the crypto community. An unidentified Bitcoin user sent approximately 2.56 BTC to the Bitcoin Genesis Address, which was worth nearly $180,000 at the time. This address is directly linked to the first block mined in 2009 and is widely regarded as a symbolic “starting wallet” left by Satoshi Nakamoto.
Blockchain explorers show that this fund only experienced a one-way inflow, with no records of any outflow. Since the private key associated with the Genesis Address has never been used, it is generally believed to be lost or permanently invalid. Therefore, any Bitcoin sent to it can no longer circulate, effectively “locked” on the chain. After this transfer, the total balance of the address exceeded 57 BTC, valued at several million dollars.
On social media, there was a brief speculation of “Satoshi Nakamoto’s return,” but blockchain analysts quickly clarified: the address has not made any outgoing transactions, and there is no proof of a direct connection to the Bitcoin creator. Several research institutions still estimate that Satoshi mined about 1.1 million BTC in the early days, but these assets have never been moved.
Such events are not unprecedented. Some users refer to these actions as “sacrificing to Satoshi,” often as a symbolic tribute or a deliberate act of asset destruction. Since these Bitcoins will not re-enter the market, they are theoretically expected to slightly reduce circulating supply, but the actual impact on prices is minimal.
In 2024, there have also been instances of transferring high-value BTC to the same address, each time sparking discussions about faith, remembrance, and waste. Industry experts generally believe that real market shocks will only occur when wallets associated with Satoshi Nakamoto make outgoing transactions. Until then, these kinds of transactions are more about adding new footnotes to Bitcoin’s legendary history.
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