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Just came across Stefan Thomas's story again, and honestly, it never gets old. You know the one – back in 2011, this San Francisco programmer made a Bitcoin educational video and got paid 7,002 BTC. Sounds like pocket change back then, right? But here's where it gets wild.
He threw those coins into an IronKey USB wallet and wrote down the password on paper. The paper disappeared. By 2012, he realized the password was gone too. And here's the kicker – IronKey only allows 10 attempts before it locks permanently. He'd already blown through 8 tries. Two shots left. Just two.
For years, nothing. Bitcoin kept climbing. Then climbing more. Then just kept going. By 2021, the New York Times picked up the story and it blew up globally. Suddenly everyone's doing the math: 7,002 Bitcoins worth hundreds of millions of dollars, just sitting there. Locked. Unreachable.
That's when things got interesting. Cryptographers showed up. Hardware forensics teams. Hacker groups. Everyone had a solution, everyone wanted a cut. Stefan Thomas considered some, rejected others, partnered with a few. Nothing worked.
Now we're in 2026, and the situation hasn't changed. That IronKey is still locked. Those 7,002 BTC are still inaccessible. Do the math at today's prices – we're talking tens of billions of dollars in digital assets just frozen in place.
But here's what I find most interesting about Stefan Thomas's situation: it's not really about the money anymore. It's a perfect illustration of how crypto actually works. No safety net. No customer service department to call. No recovery options. No exceptions. You hold the key, you own it. You lose the key, the world doesn't care. The coins stay there forever, visible but untouchable.
It's a brutal reminder that technology gives you sovereignty, but it collects its price upfront. Every time I see Bitcoin hit new highs, I think about Stefan Thomas and those 7,002 coins sitting in digital limbo. That story says more about the nature of self-custody than any article ever could.