Binance Square

2011

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pr4x1
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Bitcoin Was Already Dead at $2Found this fossil from The Guardian, dated October 18, 2011. BTC had crashed from $33 to under $2. Mining was uneconomical, botnets were doing the heavy lifting, and Paul Krugman was already writing obituaries. “The value of Bitcoins… has plummeted across exchanges – to a level where it costs more to ‘mine’ them than they are worth.” “It’s an endless cycle of stupidity that simply cannot be solved by human nature.”“The biggest weakness about Bitcoin was that… their apparent value was based on small numbers of transactions within a small group.” MTGox was in full clown mode. Someone dumped 400,000 coins, nuked the price to one cent, and the exchange just… unplugged itself. Classic 2011 energy. Krugman chimed in, saying: “What we want from a monetary system isn’t to make people holding money rich… the Bitcoin economy has in effect experienced massive deflation.” Meanwhile Surowiecki casually dropped this: “The vast majority of bitcoins are held by people hoping to sell them to other people.” So basically, not much has changed. But here's the kicker: back then, there were only 7.48 million coins mined. Network hash rate was falling. Everyone thought the experiment was over. And yet, the whole thing kept crawling forward like a rat in a sewer, unglamorous, mostly forgotten, but alive. t’s 2025. The tickers are green (not today, but sometimes), the candles are tall (when they feel like it), and most still have no real grasp of the technology behind it. But in 2011, when Bitcoin slipped under two dollars, nobody talked about inflation hedges or monetary revolutions. They were selling their GPUs on forums and calling it a failed experiment. And still, the chain kept ticking. Nobody fixed it. Nothing was fixed. It just kept working anyway. Just blocks. One after another. Like nothing happened. That’s the whole story. The rest is just commentary. #CryptoHistory #2011

Bitcoin Was Already Dead at $2

Found this fossil from The Guardian, dated October 18, 2011. BTC had crashed from $33 to under $2. Mining was uneconomical, botnets were doing the heavy lifting, and Paul Krugman was already writing obituaries.
“The value of Bitcoins… has plummeted across exchanges – to a level where it costs more to ‘mine’ them than they are worth.”
“It’s an endless cycle of stupidity that simply cannot be solved by human nature.”“The biggest weakness about Bitcoin was that… their apparent value was based on small numbers of transactions within a small group.”
MTGox was in full clown mode. Someone dumped 400,000 coins, nuked the price to one cent, and the exchange just… unplugged itself. Classic 2011 energy.
Krugman chimed in, saying:
“What we want from a monetary system isn’t to make people holding money rich… the Bitcoin economy has in effect experienced massive deflation.”
Meanwhile Surowiecki casually dropped this:
“The vast majority of bitcoins are held by people hoping to sell them to other people.”
So basically, not much has changed.
But here's the kicker: back then, there were only 7.48 million coins mined. Network hash rate was falling. Everyone thought the experiment was over. And yet, the whole thing kept crawling forward like a rat in a sewer, unglamorous, mostly forgotten, but alive.
t’s 2025. The tickers are green (not today, but sometimes), the candles are tall (when they feel like it), and most still have no real grasp of the technology behind it. But in 2011, when Bitcoin slipped under two dollars, nobody talked about inflation hedges or monetary revolutions. They were selling their GPUs on forums and calling it a failed experiment.
And still, the chain kept ticking. Nobody fixed it. Nothing was fixed. It just kept working anyway. Just blocks. One after another. Like nothing happened.
That’s the whole story. The rest is just commentary.
#CryptoHistory #2011
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Bullish
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#Bitcoin #btc #holder #2011 for those who still don't follow me well here I share it, for the new ones because the old ones already know that it has been published for days 💪 we are holders at heart bitcoins are not sold 💪
#Bitcoin #btc #holder #2011 for those who still don't follow me well here I share it, for the new ones because the old ones already know that it has been published for days 💪 we are holders at heart bitcoins are not sold 💪
#bitcoin☀️ has seen dramatic price fluctuations since its inception in #2009 , with multiple notable peaks. For instance, in #2011 , Bitcoin jumped from mere cents to $32 before crashing back to $2.10. Another major bull run occurred in 2017 when Bitcoin surged from $1,000 to nearly $20,000 by December, followed by a correction. Its most significant peak came in April 2021, reaching around $63,000. If you'd invested $100 in Bitcoin in 2011, when it was priced around $1, you could have bought 100 BTC. By April 2021, at its peak, that $100 investment would have been worth approximately #$6.3 #million ! However, Bitcoin's price is highly volatile, and such returns come with high risks. External events, such as the 2014 Mt. Gox hack, which led to the loss of 850,000 BTC and a significant price drop, showcase the risks involved in crypto trading. Long-term trends, like the Stock-to-Flow model, also suggest Bitcoin’s price growth is linked to its limited supply. Remember, cryptocurrency investments can be risky and should be approached cautiously.
#bitcoin☀️ has seen dramatic price fluctuations since its inception in #2009 , with multiple notable peaks. For instance, in #2011 , Bitcoin jumped from mere cents to $32 before crashing back to $2.10. Another major bull run occurred in 2017 when Bitcoin surged from $1,000 to nearly $20,000 by December, followed by a correction. Its most significant peak came in April 2021, reaching around $63,000.

If you'd invested
$100 in Bitcoin in 2011, when it was priced around $1, you could have bought 100 BTC. By April 2021, at its peak, that $100 investment would have been worth approximately #$6.3 #million !

However, Bitcoin's price is highly volatile, and such returns come with high risks. External events, such as the 2014 Mt. Gox hack, which led to the loss of 850,000 BTC and a significant price drop, showcase the risks involved in crypto trading. Long-term trends, like the Stock-to-Flow model, also suggest Bitcoin’s price growth is linked to its limited supply.

Remember, cryptocurrency investments can be risky and should be approached cautiously.
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