Satoshi Nakamoto Sued? $83.7 Billion Worth of BTC Up for 'Legal Claim'

marsbit發佈於 2026-06-01更新於 2026-06-01

文章摘要

An anonymous individual known as Noah Doe, along with two Wyoming LLCs, has filed a lawsuit in the New York Supreme Court. They are attempting to use New York's "lost and found" laws to claim legal ownership of approximately 837 billion USD worth of Bitcoin held in 39,069 dormant addresses. Crucially, this list includes addresses believed to belong to Bitcoin's creator, Satoshi Nakamoto (holding around 837 billion USD), alongside other long-inactive addresses from Mt. Gox and early Bitcoin holders. The plaintiff's legal strategy hinges on classifying these public Bitcoin addresses as "lost property." They submitted a USB drive containing only the public addresses to the New York Police Department, sent OP_RETURN notifications on the Bitcoin blockchain, and issued press releases. Their argument is that after these efforts and a waiting period, they should be granted ownership. A key, and highly controversial, claim is an unnamed "independent expert" valuing each address at under 10 USD, allowing for a faster legal process. Analysts from Galaxy point out major flaws in the case. The plaintiff never physically possessed the Bitcoin or private keys. The "under 10 USD" valuation is considered unrealistic, and allowing anonymous companies to claim such vast assets is highly unusual. Even if the plaintiff wins, they would only receive a court declaration of ownership, not the actual private keys to move the Bitcoin. The real danger lies in this court document acting as a "cloud o...

Originally fromGalaxy

Compiled by / Odaily Planet Daily Golem(@web 3_golem)

Who would have thought that Bitcoin founder Satoshi Nakamoto would one day get sued, potentially having the 'ownership' of wallet addresses taken away. And you, the reader of this article, might also be one of the 'defendants', as long as you have dormant Bitcoin addresses.

This past March, the New York State Supreme Court accepted a lawsuit: the plaintiff seeks to confirm ownership of over 3.7 million bitcoins (approximately $274 billion) associated with 39,069 Bitcoin addresses. The plaintiff goes by the pseudonym Noah Doe and two unnamed Wyoming limited liability companies (pseudonyms 'ABC Company' and 'XYZ Company').

The plaintiff asks the New York State Supreme Court, through a declaratory judgment action based on New York's lost property law, to confirm their ownership of these dormant assets. More importantly, these 39,069 addresses also include addresses suspected to belong to Bitcoin founder Satoshi Nakamoto (a total of 21,744 addresses, holding approximately 1.09 million bitcoins, valued at around $83.7 billion at current prices).

In simple terms, an anonymous individual and his companies registered in Wyoming are trying to get a New York court to rule that Satoshi Nakamoto's bitcoins (and many other cryptocurrencies) are lost property, and that they rightfully own them for 'finding' these bitcoins. Galaxy analyzed the plaintiff's potential motives and identity, the impact on Bitcoin, and the likelihood of the plaintiff's success.

Odaily Planet Daily has compiled and condensed the full article below, enjoy~

Case Overview and Deconstructing the Plaintiff's Tactics

The plaintiff has filed an application with the New York State Supreme Court requesting the court to declare that they own 39,069 dormant Bitcoin addresses and all assets within them. The legal basis is a declaratory judgment confirming ownership under Rule 3001 of the New York Civil Practice Law and Rules, grounded in New York's lost property law, specifically Article 7-B of the Personal Property Law. This provision states that a finder of lost property who turns it over to the police and does not face a denial of ownership from the rightful owner within a specified waiting period may ultimately acquire ownership. The plaintiff is attempting to apply this old framework to Bitcoin.

The specific tactic is: Noah Doe, as the finder, delivers a USB drive containing the addresses (not private keys or proof of address ownership, merely the public addresses) to the New York City Police Department's 17th Precinct, substituting this for handing over the lost property to the police; then initiates OP_RETURN notifications on the Bitcoin blockchain and issues a press release, substituting for contacting the owner; finally, has an expert appraise each address as being worth less than $10, allowing the entire case to proceed under the fastest process stipulated by this provision.

It is necessary to clarify that, even if the plaintiff wins completely, they will only receive a piece of paper—a court declaration—and nothing more. They will not receive any private keys and cannot transfer any bitcoins.

The real value of a New York judgment lies elsewhere. It would act as a 'cloud on title': if these bitcoins ever appear in any regulated venue in the future, the plaintiff could present this document to challenge an exchange or custodian. This is the potential risk this case poses to Bitcoin holders and why this seemingly absurd lawsuit is still worth careful examination.

Case Timeline

The following timeline consists of two parts: one is the factual narrative of discovering the addresses as told by the plaintiff, and the other is the procedural history of the case in court.

  • October 2024: Noah Doe claims he discovered 'security issues' with certain addresses and developed an 'algorithm' to flag abandoned addresses. (In reality, these addresses do not have 'security issues');
  • December 26, 2024: Noah Doe first 'finds' approximately 1,625 addresses. A USB drive containing the addresses is delivered to the NYPD's 17th Precinct on January 1, 2025;
  • February 2025: Noah Doe hires Solomon Brothers Strategic Advisors as consultants;
  • March 31 and April 14, 2025: Noah Doe 'finds' 546 addresses and 39,911 addresses respectively, delivering a USB drive with the addresses to the police precinct after each 'discovery';
  • June 30 to July 10, 2025: Noah Doe sends 'abandonment notices' to each address via OP_RETURN;
  • August 7, 2025: Issues a press release to global media. Reported by CoinDesk, Bitcoinist, Yahoo Finance, Investing.com, and Galaxy Digital's research report;
  • August 2025 to February 2026: Solomon Brothers receives threatening emails, including over 50 emails containing only "4 8 15 16 23 42," demanding $1.5 million and 50 bitcoins;
  • October 10, 2025: The 90-day owner claim period ends;
  • December 2025: Noah Doe transfers these addresses to ABC Company and places 98% of its interest into an irrevocable trust; ABC Company transfers 17.7% of its interest to XYZ Company;
  • March 11, 2026: Original summons and complaint filed. Judge Arlene P. Bruce annotates the original order to show cause;
  • March 23, 2026: Judge Emily Morales-Minerva recuses herself from the case;
  • March 25 to April 17, 2026: Judge Carlos J. Voltron signs the order to show cause (allowing use of pseudonyms) and an order authorizing alternative service via OP_RETURN (without notifying opposing parties);
  • May 1, 2026: First amended complaint expands the defendant list to defendants 1 through 39,069, attaching a full list of addresses;
  • May 21-22, 2026: On-chain service of process: 98 batch transactions in Bitcoin blocks 950,446 to 950,576;
  • May 22, 2026: Carlos J. Voltron files affidavits of service containing verification reports for each batch and 39,069 lines of verification details (Documents 27-29).

Legal Basis and Tactics Proposed by Plaintiff

Article 7-B of the New York Personal Property Law (Sections 251-258) establishes a short-form lost property regime. It provides two distinct paths for a finder to acquire ownership, both of which are invoked by the plaintiff in this case.

  • Path A: Custody (Sections 252, 253/254, 257(1)). Section 252 requires a person finding lost property valued at $20 or more to return it to the owner or deliver it to police custody within 10 days. Sections 253(7) and 254 stipulate varying police custody periods based on the property's value: less than $100 for 3 months, $100-$500 for 6 months, $500-$5,000 for 1 year, and $5,000 or more for 3 years.
  • Path B: The Sub-$10 Shortcut (Section 257(2)). For lost property valued under $10, ownership vests in the finder one year after finding if the finder "has made reasonable efforts to find the owner and return the property, but has been unsuccessful," without requiring police delivery.

The complaint's (unnamed) 'independent expert' appraised the 'present' value of each address at under $10, citing the unlikelihood of recovery. This valuation determines the procedural path for the entire case, as it places each address under the uniform one-year vesting period of Section 257(2). It also makes the Path A process shorter, with police custody for items under $100 being only three months pursuant to Section 254.

Plaintiff's Arguments

The complaint lists several arguments by the plaintiff, each of which must hold for the next to succeed, forming an interlinked chain.

  • These addresses constitute lost property. Addresses are treated as property, akin to bank accounts. Under this view, losing a private key does not destroy the property; its contents are merely 'lost,' and a finder can claim them.
  • Noah Doe is the finder, and NYPD custody complies with relevant regulations. Section 252 of Article 7-B requires the finder to deliver the property to the police. The plaintiff argues that delivering a USB drive with address information to the 17th Precinct satisfies this requirement.
  • Ownership has vested in the finder. For property valued under $10, Section 257(2) states ownership vests in the finder one year after finding if the finder has made reasonable efforts to locate the owner but failed. The OP_RETURN notices, press release, and 90-day claim period are all presented as constituting reasonable efforts.
  • These addresses have been abandoned. Noah Doe's 'algorithm' flags addresses held by himself, unused for at least five years, and inactive during significant price increases. Approximately 424 owners who reacted by moving tokens were removed from the list, leaving the 39,069 non-responsive owners as defendants.
  • Service via OP_RETURN notification is lawful. Because the owners are allegedly unknown and cannot be located, the court authorized alternative service under CPLR § 308(5) by sending an on-chain notice pointing to the complaint to each address.
  • The plaintiff can proceed anonymously. Given the known risks of kidnapping for large Bitcoin holders, the plaintiff was permitted to proceed using pseudonyms.

Who Are the Owners?

Galaxy analyzed the addresses claimed to be 'found' by plaintiff Noah Doe using their Bitcoin full node and internal research database.

As of May 25, 2026, the 39,069 'Noah Doe addresses' hold 3,799,629 bitcoins, valued at approximately $293.5 billion at $77,245 per bitcoin. This value is not evenly distributed but concentrated in several distinct clusters, each telling a different story.

Composition of addresses found by Noah Doe

Satoshi (Patoshi) Addresses

Comprise 21,923 addresses, ~1,096,134 BTC (~$84.7 billion). These are early-mined bitcoins linked to Bitcoin's creator via the 'Patoshi' nonce pattern and have never moved.

Mt. Gox Hacker Address

Only 1 address, ~79,957 BTC (~$6.2 billion). This is John Doe #1. These bitcoins were stolen from the early Bitcoin exchange Mt. Gox and have lain dormant since 2011. They are contested property that investigators have tracked for years.

Counterparty Burn Address

Only 1 address, ~2,131 BTC (~$160 million). This is John Doe #104, a provably unspendable 'burn' address. No one has ever held its key because, by design, none exists.

Other Dormant Addresses

7,144 addresses, ~2,621,407 BTC (~$202.5 billion). These addresses contain significant holdings from early adopters and the exchange era, unmoved for many years.

This dormancy has a long history. If we sort each address by the last year its bitcoin moved on-chain, we find the majority of movement concentrated in Bitcoin's early days. The vast majority of these bitcoins last moved between 2009 and 2013, a period when Bitcoin's price surged from nearly zero to several hundred dollars.

But many of these addresses have been claimed before. In the Kleiman v. Wright case (S.D. Fla., 2018), Australian businessman Craig Wright submitted a list of 16,404 early-block addresses he claimed to own as part of his later-dismissed assertion of being 'Satoshi Nakamoto.'

We compared the Bitcoin addresses Wright claimed in the Kleiman litigation with Noah Doe's addresses to see their overlap.

Overlap between Noah Doe and Craig Wright addresses

The overlap is nearly identical. Of the 16,404 addresses Wright claimed, 16,350 (99.7%) are also claimed by Noah Doe's defendants, holding ~817,513 bitcoins. We cannot determine if Craig Wright has any connection to the Noah Doe case, but the overlap is notable. Craig Wright has spent years trying to claim these bitcoins through litigation but was found in contempt of court by a UK court in 2024.

Suspicious Aspects of the Case

While we are not lawyers, merely examining the case record and relevant laws reveals numerous questionable points.

Does Lost Property Law Apply?

Before any valuation or service issues, there's a more fundamental question. The lost property law was designed for physical objects that a finder picks up, holds, and delivers to the police. Noah Doe never held these coins or keys. He merely looked at public addresses on a ledger that anyone can read. Viewing a public address is far from holding lost property. Delivering a USB drive listing addresses to the police is also different from actually surrendering the lost item.

The statute envisions a finder who can return the item if the owner shows up. But here, the finder never held the coins and could never hand them over—not to the police allegedly holding them, nor to an owner coming to claim them. The core issue goes beyond ownership; losing a private key does not strip the true owner of any rights. The Bitcoin remains on-chain, and the true key holder can move it at any time, as hundreds of owners of lost bitcoins have done.

It seems obvious that ownership cannot effectively transfer to a finder who can never touch the asset.

Valuation is Unreliable

The average holding of a Noah Doe address is 97.25 BTC, worth ~$7.5 million; the median is 50.00 BTC, worth ~$3.86 million. Compared to these figures, the claim that each address is worth under $10 is untenable. It appears to be a tactic to push these assets through the legal process at the fastest possible speed.

Two further details undermine this valuation. The expert presenting the 'under $10' figure is unnamed in the documents, so this single number dictating the entire timeline cannot be scrutinized or challenged. If the logic of 'recoverable as-is' were applied universally, then nearly all self-custodied bitcoins would be valued near zero, which starkly contradicts how any user, especially a plaintiff going to such lengths to sue, treats these assets.

Anonymity of the Parties

Noah Doe's use of anonymity in this case is also suspicious. He requests anonymity to avoid being targeted as a large holder, yet the relief he seeks would force the actual address holders to reveal their identities to defend their cryptocurrency. The protection the plaintiff seeks for himself is precisely what he aims to deprive all defendants of.

Even if an individual could present a genuine personal safety theory, that theory exists to protect natural persons. ABC Company and XYZ Company are shell LLCs. A corporation has no physical entity to be threatened and no privacy to expose, so the logic of fearing extortion doesn't apply. Allowing two companies to claim trillions in property under shell names is extraordinary.

Furthermore, New York State disfavors anonymous entities. New York courts rarely permit pseudonyms. While New York historically allowed anonymous LLC ownership, the state's LLC Transparency Act now mandates disclosure of beneficial ownership, although federal regulation has narrowed its scope to foreign-formed LLCs.

Potential Directions for Subsequent Litigation

Even setting aside these details, the 'audacity' of this lawsuit becomes apparent. It is extraordinary that a New York court would award legal ownership of approximately $293 billion worth of Bitcoin (including some belonging to Satoshi Nakamoto) to anonymous parties based on a dubious 'lost property' theory with a suspect sub-$10 valuation. Courts are generally reluctant to entertain such novel and far-reaching cases, especially where property is contested and a judgment could have broad implications.

Since this is a declaratory action about property ownership, under CPLR § 1012(a)(3), the true owners of the addresses have the right to intervene directly in the suit; interested non-owners may seek permission to intervene under § 1013. However, while the principle allows intervention, a significant practical obstacle exists. To intervene, an owner must come forward and prove control over the listed address, which is precisely the deanonymization that cautious Bitcoin whales spend their lives avoiding.

The defendant addresses are all pseudonymous and deliberately not publicly listed. Therefore, by late June 2026, roughly 30 days after service, a technical default judgment is almost certain to occur. A motion for default judgment will likely be filed during the summer. However, for many reasons, the court is unlikely to swiftly enter a default judgment granting all the relief the plaintiff seeks.

First, a declaration of ownership is not a clerk's default for a sum certain; it requires an application to the court, which retains discretion to require a hearing and demand actual evidence. Second, the novelty and high stakes of the theory often prompt judicial skepticism, not 'rubber-stamp' approval. Moreover, the validity of OP_RETURN service itself is debatable, and questionable affidavits of service give the court reason to proceed cautiously. Finally, any actual holder who intervenes could turn a largely uncontested case into a genuine contest.

Galaxy estimates the likelihood of the court issuing a full ownership declaration in a default judgment is low, and any such ruling is more likely to be narrower in scope and issued after a hearing.

What if the Plaintiff Wins?

Even with a complete victory, the plaintiff still cannot seize any Bitcoin. What they hold is a New York declaration, not a set of private keys. The principle 'Not your keys, not your coins' applies to them as well.

Therefore, the danger is not that the plaintiff could seize Satoshi's bitcoins or any other bitcoins mentioned in the Noah Doe defendant addresses. The danger is that if any of these bitcoins are transferred to a centralized exchange or custodian, the plaintiff could present their New York judgment to that institution and attempt to place a lien on those bitcoins. Such action could freeze assets, trigger years of litigation, and force the holder who moved bitcoins decades later to prove ownership, jeopardizing their own anonymity.

The paper title certificate is leverage against regulated intermediaries and those who rely on them. This almost certainly explains why, even though a judgment could never directly affect the Bitcoin itself, it is still worth pursuing for whoever is behind this case.

相關問答

QWhat is the core legal strategy used by the anonymous plaintiff (Noah Doe) in the New York case to claim ownership of dormant Bitcoin addresses?

AThe plaintiff is attempting to apply New York's lost property law (specifically Article 7-B of the Personal Property Law) to Bitcoin addresses. The strategy involves: 1) Claiming the dormant addresses are 'lost property'. 2) 'Delivering' this property to the police by submitting a USB drive with the public addresses (not private keys) to a New York City police precinct. 3) Using OP_RETURN transactions and press releases as 'reasonable efforts' to locate the owners. 4) Having an unnamed expert value each address's 'recoverable' worth at under $10, which qualifies them for a faster, one-year vesting period under the law, bypassing longer custody requirements for high-value items.

QAccording to the article's analysis, what are the main categories of Bitcoin addresses included in the lawsuit, and which is the most significant?

AThe 39,069 addresses are categorized into four main groups: 1) Satoshi (Patoshi) addresses: 21,923 addresses holding ~1.09 million BTC (~$84.7B), linked to Bitcoin's creator. This is the most significant group by cultural and symbolic value. 2) Mt. Gox hacker address: 1 address holding ~79,957 BTC (~$6.2B), from the 2011 exchange hack. 3) Counterparty burn address: 1 provably unspendable address holding ~2,131 BTC (~$160M). 4) Other dormant addresses: 7,144 addresses holding ~2.62 million BTC (~$202.5B), comprising early holders and exchange-era Bitcoin.

QWhy would a New York court judgment granting ownership to the plaintiff not allow them to actually seize or move the Bitcoin?

ABecause the plaintiff would only receive a declaratory judgment—a piece of paper stating their legal ownership under New York law. They do not possess and cannot obtain the private keys required to cryptographically sign transactions and move the Bitcoin on the blockchain. The fundamental Bitcoin principle 'not your keys, not your coins' still applies. The judgment's power lies in creating a 'cloud on title' that could be used against regulated intermediaries like exchanges in the future.

QWhat is the primary risk to actual Bitcoin holders if the plaintiff were to win this lawsuit?

AThe primary risk is not direct seizure of coins, but future legal entanglement. If any Bitcoin from the listed addresses is later transferred to a regulated exchange or custodian, the plaintiff could present the New York judgment to that institution, claiming a legal interest and potentially freezing the assets. This could force the long-dormant holder into a lengthy legal battle to prove ownership, compromising their anonymity and creating significant hassle and cost.

QWhat are some of the key weaknesses or 'suspicious points' in the plaintiff's case as highlighted by the Galaxy analysis?

AKey weaknesses include: 1) Applicability of Law: The lost property law is designed for physical items one can pick up and hand over. The plaintiff never held the Bitcoin/keys, only viewed public addresses. 2) Valuation: Deeming each multi-million dollar address worth '<$10' based on 'recoverability' is highly questionable and appears to be a procedural tactic. The unnamed expert's valuation is unverifiable. 3) Anonymity: The plaintiff (Noah Doe and shell companies) seeks anonymity for safety while suing to force actual holders to de-anonymize themselves to defend their property—a contradictory standard. 4) Novelty & Scale: The court is likely to be skeptical of applying an old law in this novel, unprecedented way to claim nearly $3 trillion in assets.

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什麼是 BITCOIN

理解 HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu (ERC-20) 及其在加密空間中的地位 近年來,加密貨幣市場見證了迷因幣的流行激增,吸引了不僅是交易者的注意,還有尋求社區參與和娛樂價值的人士。在這些獨特的代幣中,有一個有趣的項目 HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu (ERC-20),它將文化參考融入加密貨幣的織造中。本文深入探討 HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu 的關鍵方面,探索其機制、以社區為驅動的精神,以及其與更廣泛的加密生態的互動。 HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu (ERC-20) 是什麼? 正如其名所示,HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu 是一種建立在以太坊區塊鏈上的迷因幣,按照 ERC-20 標準分類。與強調實用性或投資潛力的傳統加密貨幣不同,這項代幣依賴於娛樂價值和其社區的力量。該項目旨在促進一個讓互動用戶可以聚在一起、分享想法和參與受不同文化現象啟發的活動的環境。 HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu 的一個顯著特點是其 交易零稅。這一引人注目的元素旨在鼓勵交易和社區參與,無需擔心可能會阻礙小型交易者的額外費用。該幣的總供應量定為十億個代幣,這一數字標示其意圖在社區內保持較大的流通量。 HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu (ERC-20) 的創建者 HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu 的起源有些神秘;對創建者的具體資訊尚不清楚。這個代幣的開發缺乏可識別的團隊或明確的藍圖,這在迷因幣領域並不罕見。相反,該項目是自然產生的,其進展主要依賴於社區的熱情和參與。 HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu (ERC-20) 的投資者 關於外部投資和支持,HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu 亦保持模稜兩可。該代幣並未列出任何已知的投資基金或顯著的組織支持。相反,該項目的生命力來自其草根社區,通過集體行動和參與在加密空間促進其增長和可持續性。 HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu (ERC-20) 如何運作? 作為一種迷因幣,HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu 主要在傳統的資產價值框架之外運作。以下是幾個定義該項目運作方式的獨特方面: 零稅交易:由於交易沒有稅費,使用者可以自由地買賣該代幣,而不必擔心隱藏成本。 社區參與:該項目依賴於社區互動,利用社交媒體平台創造話題並促進參與。討論、內容分享及互動是幫助擴展其影響力和加強支持者忠誠度的重要元素。 無實用性:需要指出的是,HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu 在金融生態中並不提供具體的實用性。相反,它被定義為主要用於娛樂和社區活動的代幣。 文化參考:該代幣巧妙地融入了流行文化中的元素,以吸引興趣,與迷因愛好者和加密追隨者建立聯繫。 HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu 範例展示了迷因幣如何與更傳統的加密貨幣項目運作不同,作為創新的社會構造進入市場,而非實用資產。 HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu (ERC-20) 的時間線 HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu 的歷史標誌著幾個值得注意的里程碑: 創建:這個代幣源於一個病毒式的迷因,捕捉了許多加密愛好者的想像力。具體的創建日期目前並不清楚,凸顯其自然興起。 上架交易所:HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu 已經在多個交易所上架,使社區更容易存取和交易。 社區互動倡議:持續進行旨在增進社區互動的活動,包括比賽、社交媒體活動和來自粉絲和支持者的內容創作。 未來擴展計劃:該項目的路線圖包括推出 NFT 收藏品、周邊商品及相關電子商務網站,進一步與社區互動並嘗試為其生態系統增添更多維度。 關於 HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu (ERC-20) 的關鍵點 以社區為驅動的特質:該項目優先考慮集體意見和創意,確保用戶參與在其發展過程中居於核心地位。 迷因幣分類:它代表了以娛樂為基礎的加密貨幣的典範,與傳統投資工具大相徑庭。 與比特幣無直接關聯:儘管在代碼名稱上有相似之處,HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu 是獨特的,並不與比特幣或其他已建立的加密貨幣存在關係。 協作焦點:HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu 旨在為持有者創造一個共享故事和協作的空間,提供創意和社區聯結的途徑。 未來前景:向超越其初步主題擴展至 NFT 和周邊商品的雄心,描繪了該項目潛在進入數字文化的更主流途徑。 隨著迷因幣繼續吸引加密貨幣社區的想像力,HarryPotterObamaSonic10Inu (ERC-20) 由於其文化聯繫和以社區為中心的方式而脫穎而出。儘管它可能不符合以實用性為導向的代幣的典型模式,其本質在於支持者間培育的快樂和友誼,突顯了在日益數字化的時代中,加密貨幣的演變特性。隨著該項目的持續發展,觀察社區動態如何影響其在不斷變化的區塊鏈技術格局中的軌跡將是重要的。

2.0k 人學過發佈於 2024.04.01更新於 2024.12.03

什麼是 BITCOIN

如何購買BTC

歡迎來到HTX.com!在這裡,購買Bitcoin (BTC)變得簡單而便捷。跟隨我們的逐步指南,放心開始您的加密貨幣之旅。第一步:創建您的HTX帳戶使用您的 Email、手機號碼在HTX註冊一個免費帳戶。體驗無憂的註冊過程並解鎖所有平台功能。立即註冊第二步:前往買幣頁面,選擇您的支付方式信用卡/金融卡購買:使用您的Visa或Mastercard即時購買Bitcoin (BTC)。餘額購買:使用您HTX帳戶餘額中的資金進行無縫交易。第三方購買:探索諸如Google Pay或Apple Pay等流行支付方式以增加便利性。C2C購買:在HTX平台上直接與其他用戶交易。HTX 場外交易 (OTC) 購買:為大量交易者提供個性化服務和競爭性匯率。第三步:存儲您的Bitcoin (BTC)購買Bitcoin (BTC)後,將其存儲在您的HTX帳戶中。您也可以透過區塊鏈轉帳將其發送到其他地址或者用於交易其他加密貨幣。第四步:交易Bitcoin (BTC)在HTX的現貨市場輕鬆交易Bitcoin (BTC)。前往您的帳戶,選擇交易對,執行交易,並即時監控。HTX為初學者和經驗豐富的交易者提供了友好的用戶體驗。

5.4k 人學過發佈於 2024.12.12更新於 2026.06.02

如何購買BTC

什麼是 $BITCOIN

數字黃金 ($BITCOIN):全面分析 數字黃金 ($BITCOIN) 介紹 數字黃金 ($BITCOIN) 是一個基於區塊鏈的項目,運行於 Solana 網絡,旨在將傳統貴金屬的特徵與去中心化技術的創新相結合。雖然它與比特幣同名,常被稱為「數字黃金」,因其被視為價值儲存工具,但數字黃金是一個獨立的代幣,旨在於 Web3 生態系統中創造一個獨特的生態系。其目標是將自己定位為一個可行的替代數字資產,儘管有關其應用和功能的具體細節仍在發展中。 什麼是數字黃金 ($BITCOIN)? 數字黃金 ($BITCOIN) 是一個專門為 Solana 區塊鏈設計的加密貨幣代幣。與比特幣提供廣泛認可的價值儲存角色不同,這個代幣似乎更專注於更廣泛的應用和特徵。值得注意的方面包括: 區塊鏈基礎設施:該代幣建立在 Solana 區塊鏈上,以其處理高速和低成本交易的能力而聞名。 供應動態:數字黃金的最大供應量上限為 100 萬兆代幣(100P $BITCOIN),儘管有關其流通供應的詳細信息目前尚未披露。 實用性:雖然具體功能尚未明確說明,但有跡象表明該代幣可能被用於各種應用,可能涉及去中心化應用(dApps)或資產代幣化策略。 誰是數字黃金 ($BITCOIN) 的創建者? 目前,數字黃金 ($BITCOIN) 的創建者和開發團隊的身份仍然是 未知 的。這種情況在許多創新項目中是典型的,特別是那些與去中心化金融和迷因幣現象相關的項目。雖然這種匿名性可能促進社區驅動的文化,但也加劇了對治理和問責制的擔憂。 誰是數字黃金 ($BITCOIN) 的投資者? 可用的信息顯示,數字黃金 ($BITCOIN) 沒有任何已知的機構支持者或知名的風險投資。該項目似乎運行在一個以社區支持和採用為重點的點對點模型上,而不是傳統的資金籌集途徑。其活動和流動性主要位於去中心化交易所(DEXs),如 PumpSwap,而不是已建立的集中交易平台,進一步突顯其草根方法。 數字黃金 ($BITCOIN) 如何運作 數字黃金 ($BITCOIN) 的運作機制可以根據其區塊鏈設計和網絡特徵進行詳細說明: 共識機制:通過利用 Solana 的獨特歷史證明(PoH)結合權益證明(PoS)模型,該項目確保高效的交易驗證,促進網絡的高性能。 代幣經濟學:雖然具體的通縮機制尚未詳細說明,但巨大的最大代幣供應量暗示它可能適合微交易或尚待定義的利基用例。 互操作性:存在與 Solana 更廣泛生態系統的整合潛力,包括各種去中心化金融(DeFi)平台。然而,關於具體整合的詳細信息仍未明確。 重要事件時間表 以下是關於數字黃金 ($BITCOIN) 的重要里程碑時間表: 2023:該代幣首次在 Solana 區塊鏈上部署,並以其合約地址為標誌。 2024:數字黃金獲得曝光,因其在去中心化交易所如 PumpSwap 上可供交易,允許用戶以 SOL 進行交易。 2025:該項目見證了零星的交易活動和社區主導參與的潛在興趣,儘管截至目前尚未記錄到任何顯著的合作夥伴關係或技術進展。 關鍵分析 優勢 可擴展性:基於 Solana 的基礎設施支持高交易量,這可能增強 $BITCOIN 在各種交易場景中的實用性。 可及性:每個代幣潛在的低交易價格可能吸引零售投資者,促進更廣泛的參與,因為存在分割所有權的機會。 風險 缺乏透明度:缺乏公眾已知的支持者、開發者或審計過程可能引發對該項目可持續性和可信度的懷疑。 市場波動性:交易活動在很大程度上依賴於投機行為,這可能導致價格波動和投資者的不確定性。 結論 數字黃金 ($BITCOIN) 在快速發展的 Solana 生態系統中,作為一個引人入勝但模糊的項目出現。雖然它試圖利用「數字黃金」的敘事,但其與比特幣作為價值儲存工具的既定角色的脫離,突顯了對其預期實用性和治理結構更清晰區分的需求。未來的接受度和採用率可能取決於解決當前的不透明性,並更明確地定義其運營和經濟策略。 注意:本報告涵蓋截至 2023 年 10 月的綜合信息,並且在研究期間可能發生了進展。

83 人學過發佈於 2025.05.13更新於 2025.05.13

什麼是 $BITCOIN

相關討論

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