A British computer engineer who effectively lost the key to his bitcoin vault has been attempting to retrieve the drive medium from a nearby landfill for years.
He came up with the most audacious scheme this year, but the likelihood of it being authorized by the government is low to none.
When James Howells tossed away a hard drive that might have been the most priceless in the entire world back in 2013, his life was forever altered.
Howells had previously stashed two 2.5-inch hard discs in a drawer, one of which he planned to discard and the other containing a digital wallet with about 7,500 Bitcoin.
Despite the fact that Bitcoin has drastically decreased in value since reaching a high of around $67,000, the wallet still contains the equivalent of nearly $185 million in digital tokens.
The British computer engineer sought Newport’s city council for permission to search a landfill for the incorrect disc after unintentionally tossing it in the trash.
He even promised to pay the neighborhood authority a quarter of the cryptocurrency reserves in that wallet, but his requests were consistently turned down.
It turns out that his “treasure hunt” is deemed environmentally hazardous in all of the forms put forth during the previous nine years.
Despite this, he isn’t yet giving up. With a fresh proposal funded by a hedge fund, Howells intends to convince regional authorities to permit him to locate the priceless hard drive.
Finding such a little item among over 100,000 tonnes of trash would be a massive undertaking, but the inventor thinks automation and artificial intelligence can speed up the waste-sorting process.
Howells has created two variations of this new strategy. The first would entail sorting through all 100,000 tonnes over a period of three years using a combination of human sorters, Boston Dynamics’ robotic “Spot” dogs, and a special conveyor belt with automated sorting systems; this would cost at least $11 million and take nine to twelve months to complete.
The operation would only cost $6 million and take up to 18 months in his scaled-down plan.
A team of specialists in several fields, such as landfill excavation, trash management, and data extraction, would be involved in both schemes.
Howells even enlisted the assistance of a consultant who worked for OnTrack, a business that was successful in retrieving 99 percent of the data from the black box of the Columbia space shuttle that crashed.
Howells intends to clean and recycle the majority of the trash after it has been removed, with the remainder being reburied.
Even the possibility of constructing a wind or solar power plant atop the dump is being investigated by his team.
The goal is to have as little of an impact on the environment as possible, but it is unclear if this will ultimately persuade regulators to approve the operation.
If the operation is a success, Howells is even willing to provide additional incentives, such as utilizing some of the money to donate £50 (about $61) to each of Newport’s 150,000 citizens.
He can only wait for the official response at this time, which he hopes will be positive.
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