Help is in sight for that batch of early-Bitcoin-adopters who are sitting on untapped bounties because they’ve forgotten the passwords needed to get into their ‘wallets’.
“I’ve developed a collection of techniques that allow people to access older memories or see things they’ve put away in a stashed spot,” he told The Wall Street Journal.
A number of investors who bet on Bitcoin years ago are now in a painful limbo. In the way that bank accounts are protected by passwords, Bitcoin wallets that use ‘keys’ to transact are also typically guarded by complex security codes. However, unlike a bank, Bitcoin has no central hotline to call for a reset.
Elon Musk tweeted last month that he’d misplaced part of his bitcoin, and many other bitcoin owners have watched in similar distress as the price of the cryptocurrency surged over 20-fold at times this year to more than $19,000. On Tuesday morning, it was trading at $18,000.