It sounds like every bitcoiner’s worst nightmare: A wallet stuffed with thousands of BTC…but with no keys to open it.
The nightmare has become a reality for an American computer programmer who per the New York Times and the Guardian has been left with just two attempts to enter a correct password on his bitcoin wallet – before he is locked out of it for good.
The media outlets explained how, 10 years ago, San Francisco-based IT expert Stefan Thomas was handed a whopping BTC 7,002 (USD 241m) when he was working in Switzerland for producing a video for a firm named WeUseBitcoins, explaining how the token works.
Thomas reportedly put the tokens into a wallet and stashed the lot, including access to his private keys, on a small hard drive device called an IronKey. The hard drive is password-protected, and allows users 10 attempts at entering a correct password before encrypting and seemingly cutting off possible access to the tokens.
Agonizingly, Thomas said, he recorded the password on a piece of paper, which he then promptly lost within the space of a year. He has made eight unsuccessful attempts to access the wallet, and now just has two more tries before he is locked out forever.
The New York Times quotes Thomas as stating that he has “soured” on the idea of individual BTC owners being responsible for their own private keys, saying,