Lost/Stolen Bitcoin & Cryptocurrency Grieving Thread - For the people who remember when a Bitcoin was worth <$100. We could have been Millionaires! ;_;

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When did you learn about Bitcoin?

  • During the early days 2008-2010

    Votes: 11 26.8%
  • When it became established on the Black Market (Silk Road) 2011-2012

    Votes: 16 39.0%
  • When it first broke out 2013-2014

    Votes: 13 31.7%
  • Even later than that because I'm very young or oblivious

    Votes: 1 2.4%

  • Total voters
    41

Kulee Baba

Earth Rocker
True & Honest Fan
kiwifarms.net
Joined
Jul 14, 2018
Sometime between 2010-2012 I learned about Bitcoin. I had just built a decent Gaming PC and decided why not see how long it takes to mine this cryptocurrency of the future. I installed GUIminer and registered an account with a mining pool called Bitcoin CZ (now SlushPool). After a month of mining I accrued one mighty Bitcoin in my account. In my infinite wisdom I determined that this was a total waste of my electricity and also was going to shorten the lifespan of my computer. So I stopped caring about "Buttcoins" and went back to doing what was important, playing Crysis and Team Fortress 2.

A few years later Bitcoin breaks out at $150 and I try to log into my account. What I didn't realize was that mining pools like Slush has a little sneaky policy; if an account is inactive for a entire year the account will be deleted and any accrued bitcoin left in the account is then taken by the pool.

slushpool DONATION.JPG


My late Grandfather once told me about his Baseball Card Collection and how his parents threw it out, had they let him keep them they would have been worth a fortune. Bitcoin is my own Mickey Mantle. Whenever I read about Bitcoin I'm always left with the what if scenario of what would my life be like if I truly believed the then wild speculation that Bitcoin would become a valuable currency. I imagine myself being nigga rich with a giant compound in Santa Monica with a yacht. I cope by thinking about all the people who win the Lottery and then go bankrupt and/or get themselves killed. Still it kills me that I didn't do the bare minimum and transfer that stupid Bitcoin into a wallet. Could at least be a little more financially comfortable.

One thing that really bothers me is that there's not much online about Slush Pool and their practice of deleting accounts. Google doesn't turn up any articles covering this and even when I look at Reddit I see little complaints over the practice.
slush pool reddit.JPG

Frankly I think this practice while apparently legal is pretty fucked up. I wonder how many bitcoins have been claimed by Slush for "technical maintenance." So fuck you Marek, you owe me a bitcoin!
 
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There was one genius sysadmin at my old uni who definitely didn't become a bitcoin billionaire: he used logged time on the mainframe to mine in 2009.
IIRC he didn't end up in a cell because this kind of shit wasn't a crime back then but the uni sued him for a substantial amount of money. Got made into a nice example to discourage other intrepid early adopters.
 
I remember hearing about it when learning about TOR markets and shit, and I thought the concept of a digital currency was cool but I never really went in on it.
I don't really beat myself up over it, but I do wonder if I had gotten in so early, how much money would I have currently?
 
This is why hardware wallets and nodes exist. The declaration of "not your keys, not your coin" is a fact that every crypto owner should take to heart. Exchanges will find any way to scam you out of what you put in regardless if it's bullshit transfer fees or timeline policies like Slush did here.
 
Yeah I knew about it then. I thought it was dumb then, still think it’s dumb and I never mined or bought any, even when 10 bucks could have re-regged my SA account or bought 10k bitcoins.

Even if I did the 10k bitcoins thing (I re-regged), I would have sold half when that 10 bucks turned into a hundred, etc etc. I would never have had perfect knowledge to keep them until whatever year (2017? 2016? 2018? One of those) was exactly right. So, I’m happy never having pozloaded my negholep.
 
If $150 got you to actually look into this after atleast a year of not even logging in, there's no way you would've held onto it past $1k or the first dip lol
 
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If $150 got you to actually look into this after atleast a year of not even logging in, there's no way you would've held onto it past $1k or the first dip lol
Good point. I definitely prefer thinking of being the fool who lost his bitcoin vs the fool who sold it for a pittance.
 
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