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A choice in 2011 changed the life trajectory of programmer Stefan Thomas. That year, he did voice-over work for a Bitcoin video, earning 7002 BTC as compensation. At the time, no one took it seriously; the coin's price was only a few dozen dollars. He transferred this "small reward" into an IronKey hardware wallet, with the password written on a piece of paper. The paper was eventually lost.
In 2012, Stefan realized he had truly forgotten the password.
IronKey's rules are ruthless: only 10 attempts allowed. After 10 incorrect tries, the device is permanently encrypted, and the data is completely locked. So far, he has used 8 attempts. 2 attempts remain. Those 2 attempts will determine whether he can access this asset.
Years passed by. Bitcoin's price soared. By 2021, The New York Times reported this story. People suddenly realized: these 7002 bitcoins are now worth hundreds of millions of dollars. A multi-billion dollar mystery locked inside a hardware wallet, unseen and untouched.
The story began to spread wildly, and various unlocking solutions emerged like mushrooms after rain. Expert teams and independent hackers all promised to crack it or demanded a share. Stefan collaborated with several schemes, but the entire process moved extremely slowly.
Fast forward to 2025, IronKey remains tightly sealed. Those 7002 bitcoins are still inaccessible. They are right there. Visible. Out of reach.
The reason this story keeps being retold is not because of greed, but because it exposes a fundamental contradiction in the crypto world: between ownership and control, there is no room for buffer. Forget a password, and tens of billions of dollars can vanish right before your eyes. Maybe one day it will be unlocked, or maybe it will sleep forever inside that device.