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Researchers crack 11-year-old password, recover $3 million in bitcoin
(arstechnica.com)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
Isn’t this explicitly someone’s?
The password was forgotten and he asked 2 famous hackers for help, who took a fee and gave the wallet back to Michael. So, ownership is sort of loosely defined at this point. Sure, Michael probably had legal rights to it, but it held no actual value until taken by somebody else.
If I lose to key to my vault, and require a locksmith to enter… does my vault hold no value until I can enter it? Of course not, the contents is still there.
I get where you’re going, but really it makes no sense. The value (or as close to value as we are willing to put on crypto) was always there. Whether or not someone was able to get into it doesn’t change the fact that it’s there.
If a vault buried somewhere you don't remember is unearthed by experts decades later, I would argue it isn't yours.
Forgetting the password is more akin to losing the key. You dont forget where the blockchain is.