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I saw something quite interesting that happened over the weekend: someone sent 2.565 BTC directly to Satoshi Nakamoto's genesis address, the famous 1A1zP1eP5QGefi2DMPTfTL5SLmv7DivfNa. With the current price, we're talking about about $181K that were simply sent to an address from which no one can withdraw funds. Basically, it's money that is permanently burned.
The curious thing is that this isn't the first time it has happened, but the amount is quite notable. Arkham Intelligence verified the transaction, so everything is recorded on the blockchain. It's like a digital tribute to Satoshi Nakamoto, the creator of Bitcoin. Some think it's a form of 'proof of burn' to reduce circulating supply, others simply see it as a symbolic act.
This also brought back the conversation about how much Bitcoin Satoshi Nakamoto actually owns. Analysts estimate that he has around 1.1 million BTC accumulated since the early days of mining, which would currently be worth more than $77 billion. But here’s the fascinating part: those coins have never moved. Not a single one.
The genesis address is special because it received the first 50 BTC from the Genesis Block mined on January 3, 2009. The private keys to access those funds are considered lost or never usable. That’s why any Bitcoin sent there remains locked forever.
To be honest, it doesn't affect the price or the security of the network. But it says a lot about the Bitcoin community that people keep sending value to Satoshi Nakamoto's address as a form of honor or demonstration of commitment. It’s a ritual that reinforces the decentralized history of the project. Each transaction is permanently recorded, auditable by anyone. That’s what makes Bitcoin different from traditional financial systems.