週二,鏈上分析師兼 Timechainindex.com 創辦人 Sani 提出警示一筆比特幣交易:該筆交易中,所有人轉移了 107 BTC,依目前匯率計值 820 萬美元,至銷毀地址,使資金永久無法存取,且無法進行支出。
According to onchain data, on Monday, May 25, an unidentified wallet transferred 107.1302 BTC valued at more than $8.2 million to what is known as a burn address. In simple terms, a burn address is a public cryptographic destination with no known private key, meaning any bitcoin sent there becomes permanently locked and entirely unspendable. It is, quite literally, comparable to tossing $8.2 million in U.S. dollar bills into a fire.
Onchain analyst and Timechainindex.com founder Sani was the first to identify the unusual transfer. “Someone just broadcasted 5 transactions totaling 107 BTC to the bitcoin ‘burn address’ 1111111111111111111114oLvT2,” Sani wrote on Tuesday. Hardware wallet manufacturer Trezor responded to Sani’s X post with a meme depicting Sesame Street’s Elmo standing in front of roaring flames.
Blockstream founder Adam Back also responded to Sani’s post. “Accidental quantum bounty?” Back asked in the thread. Sani replied, “Looks like Maximus Retardimus.” A bitcoin burn address is often created by intentionally generating a valid public key or script with a recognizable, text-based pattern instead of deriving it from a randomly generated private key.
The wallet “1111111111111111111114oLvT2” balance history according to Arkham Intelligence’s explorer.
Because the Bitcoin network only requires a mathematically valid destination format to accept a transaction, anyone can send funds to such an address. Yet, since the probability of discovering the corresponding private key is effectively nonexistent, any bitcoin transferred there is permanently inaccessible and cannot be spent.
A notable example came in January 2014 when the Counterparty project launched by asking participants to destroy bitcoin through transfers to the burn address 1CounterpartyXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXUFS6t. Over 20 days, users burned 2,131.11 BTC, now worth millions of dollars. In return, the protocol automatically distributed 2.6 million XCP tokens without an initial coin offering ( ICO) or founder allocation.
This particular burn address that received 107 BTC contains 21 consecutive ones followed by “14oLvT2” at the end of the wallet string. Oddly enough, the address now holds 807.238 BTC worth $62.15 million after accumulating 385,811 confirmed unspent transaction outputs ( UTXOs). Another curious detail is that the burn wallet was created on Aug. 10, 2010. Since then, it has never sent a single satoshi because doing so is impossible.
The wallet was largely dormant from 2010 through early 2014, maintaining a near-zero BTC balance. Around late 2014 to early 2015, however, the address began accumulating funds, climbing to roughly 30 to 40 BTC before gradually reaching approximately 50 to 60 BTC by 2016.
The balance remained fairly stable throughout 2017, 2018, and into 2019, hovering between 60 and 80 BTC with very little movement. That extended plateau continued through 2020 with only minor changes. The largest shift came between late 2020 and early 2021, when the balance jumped from roughly 80 BTC to about 150–175 BTC in what appears to have been a major transfer event.
Growth accelerated further through 2022 and 2023, with the wallet climbing from around 175 BTC to nearly 500 BTC by mid-2022 before reaching approximately 500–520 BTC by early 2023. Another sizable increase arrived around mid-2023, lifting the balance to roughly 600–650 BTC. Accumulation continued steadily through 2024, eventually approaching 700 BTC.
Sani 標記的最新 107 BTC 轉帳,使該錢包餘額推升至目前水準。截至目前,尚未出現任何解釋,說明為何一個身分不明的錢包所有人會自願摧毀價值超過 820 萬美元的比特幣。該交易沒有連結到任何身分,且看不出與協議啟動、銷毀作證機制或已知專案之間的明顯關聯,導致加密社群只能猜測。
不論這是抗議行為、精心設計的宣告、災難性的使用者錯誤,或是其他完全不同的原因,仍然不得而知。可以確定的是,這個錢包中所持有的全部 807 BTC 都將永遠消失,吸收到一個地址中;該地址在超過十年時間裡已消耗等值數千萬美元,且永遠不會釋放出任何一筆 satoshi。就目前而言,這次銷毀背後的動機,和損失本身一樣,將如同永久般難以改變。
然而,這個謎團或許終究會浮出水面。
相關新聞