The First Coins Mined and Spent

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The First Coins Mined by Early Adopters by Sando Sasako Jakarta, 21 October 2018 This is a part of my book on bitcoin The First Coins Mined by Early Adopters ........................................................................................... 1 The Unspent Coins of Nakamoto ..................................................................................................... 3 The Spent Coins of Nakamoto ......................................................................................................... 5 Coins Spent by Early Adopters ...................................................................................................... 15 The Moves to A More Secured Wallet .......................................................................................... 19 Index................................................................................................................................................... 21

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The First Coins Mined by Early Adopters On 2 Nov. 2017, Taras kept on believing that Finney was the first recipient of bitcoin transfer and transaction, at least the only one of them that has ever been identified. Such conviction might come from the claim of Hal Finney.1 Finney wrote that he was the recipient of the first bitcoin transaction, when Satoshi sent 10 coins to him as a test.

Chart – Hal Finney’s wallet showing his earliest transactions, 2014 Source: Taras, Payment No. 1: A Closer Look at the Very First Bitcoin Transfer, 20171102. Cf Andy Greenberg, Nakamoto's Neighbor: My Hunt For Bitcoin's Creator Led To A Paralyzed Crypto Genius, Forbes, 20140325, https://www.forbes.com/sites/andygreenberg/2014/03/25/satoshi-nakamotos-neighbor-the-bitcoin-ghostwriter-whowasnt/#101633bf4a37

When Satoshi announced the first release of the software, Finney thought he was the first person besides Satoshi to run bitcoin. Finney also claimed to have mined block #70-something. Taras did not argue on Finney’s claim, but questioned the reason and basis of block #9 reward that was spent to Finney, not other block rewards.2 Taras later found that the newly mined bitcoins can only be spent after they have 101 confirmations. It means that only coins up to block #68 were spendable when the first payment happened. Block #0 doesn't count, because the bitcoins it created are unspendable. Taras sorted the transaction IDs of all bitcoins mined from blocks #1 to #68. Not surprisingly enough, the coins from block #9 are right on top.

1

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=155054.msg1643833#msg1643833 Taras, Payment No. 1: A Closer Look at the Very First Bitcoin Transfer, 20171102, https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=2346992.0 2

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Sando Sasako Taras also discovered that Finney had already mined block #78 and received BTC 50 as the reward, before Nakamoto sent BTC 10 on 12 Jan. 2009 which was recorded on block #170. Based on the correlation of ExtraNonce with block generation, Taras naively assumed that there were only the two of them, Finney and Nakamoto, that had been mining bitcoin. Block generation comes after additional ExtraNonce takes place. The drop and free fall of ExtraNonce on block #73 was assumed to have been caused by mining start of Finney and mining stop of Satoshi. Assume. Taras forgot to mention that the software was and has been in the development process. Bugs, glitches, and botches must present. Nodes, networks, client versions, difficulty, and hash rates vary by time and places of execution. Constant changes in rules and procedures to perfect and smooth the processes have been actual. Improved client’s feature and capabilities have been the enormous tasks to be accomplished, not just the annoying Windows-GUI on early versions of clients. Wallets’ security and advancements have been kept apace as well. Early adopters and participating proponents have to convince the skeptical opponents. The opponents might not know of how to work things out, even a bit, or put the hands on to mine first together. The academic and scientific nature in bitcoin’s early days had been valued meaningless to hoard. Thus, the wallets and private keys to spend the mining rewards seem to be abandoned, misplaced, and badly treated. Wei Dai and Nick Szabo were the other 2 early adopters mentioned by Finney. With some hindsight, we’d better look to the first sighting and appearance of Nakamoto, that is at his introduction to a new electronic cash system that's fully peer-to-peer, with no trusted third party.3 In November 2008, these were the early responders in the milist: Anne & Lynn Wheeler Ben Pfaff bmanning at vacation.karoshi.com Chad Perrin Charles Jackson dan at geer.org David G. Koontz Dirk-Willem van Gulik Florian Weimer

Hal Finney ian.farquhar at rsa.com Ivan Krstić

Peter Gutmann R.A. Hettinga Ray Dillinger

James A. Donald John Levine Jon Callas Nicholas Bohm Nicolas Williams Perry E. Metzger

Richard Salz Sandy Harris Steven M. Bellovin Tanja Lange Wouter Slegers zooko

Upon the release of Bitcoin (client) v.01, the early responders in January 2009 were: Ben Laurie Bill Frantz Bill Stewart dan at geer.org Hal Finney Jerry Leichter

John Gilmore John Levine Jonathan Thornburg Nicolas Williams Ray Dillinger Russ Nelson

Sascha Silbe Steven M. Bellovin Taral Thomas Coppi Zooko O'Whielacronx

3 Satoshi Nakamoto, Bitcoin P2P e-cash paper, 20081031, http://www.metzdowd.com/pipermail/cryptography/2008-October/014810.html

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The First Coins Mined by Early Adopters The Unspent Coins of Nakamoto None has ever known for sure how much bitcoins that the founder Satoshi Nakamoto has been mining, had been mining, or had mined. The blatant assumptions made by Sergio Demian Lerner to calculate the bitcoins mined and held by Nakamoto made Lerner the laughing stock of the century. Lerner is not and has not been a learner.

Chart – The spent and unspent coins of Nakamoto, 20090103-20100125 Source: Lerner, The Well Deserved Fortune of Satoshi Nakamoto, Bitcoin creator, Visionary and Genius, 20130417. Note: Once the PoW puzzle solved, Nakamoto earnt and awarded himself 50 BTC through regular coinbase transactions. Once awarded, the mining application was restarted. Red pixels are spent coinbases. Black pixels are unspent coinbases.

Lerner should have read many to write a phrase or even a word. Lerner failed and fails to know about cypherpunk community and mailing list. Lerner has been persisting to implement and set the LSB (Least Significant Byte) as the base to create a new definition and a new term in regard to the bitcoin blockchain. He invented the extraNonce definition to detect the coins minted and mined by Nakamoto all alone, single handedly with one PC running. Extranonce is defined by Lerner as the last 2 digits in the coinbase script. The script explored in a block, say "coinbase":"04ffff001d0104" as an example, reveals that the extraNonce of that block is 04.4 In his blog, Lerner eventually dumped his definition and implementation of ExtraNonce, but to focus on the LSB of the nonce in the block.5 Lerner's idea to use LSB was suggested by Timo Hanke, a mathematician and a bitcoin enthusiast. Lerner also presented the MSB (Most Significant Byte) of the nonce. Lerner also defined and set the unspent coinbases belong to Nakamoto, and spent coinbases belong to others. Lerner even uses a middle byte in the nonce of Satoshi nonces, just to show the unclear definition of the imbalance (of wtf). What is LSB and MSB anyway? Let's start with the real figure. The 32-bit pattern 0x12345678 is stored at address 0x00400000. The most significant byte (MSB) is 0x12; the least significant (LSB) 4 Sergio Demian Lerner, Satoshi's Fortune lower bound is 100M USD, 20130415, https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=175996.msg1840291#msg1840291 5 Sergio Demian Lerner, A new mystery about Satoshi hidden in the Bitcoin block-chain, 20130903, https://bitslog.wordpress.com/2013/09/03/new-mystery-about-satoshi

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Sando Sasako is 0x78. Within a byte the order of the bits is the same for all computers, no matter how the bytes themselves are arranged. The MSB (the "big end") of the data is placed at the byte with the lowest address. The rest of the data is placed in order in the next three bytes in memory. This is called the Big Endian Byte Order. The LSB (the "little end") of the data is placed at the byte with the lowest address. The rest of the data is placed in order in the next three bytes in memory. This is called the Little Endian Byte Order. 6

6 Bradley Kjell (kjell at ieee dot org), Big Endian and Little Endian, 20150719, https://chortle.ccsu.edu/AssemblyTutorial/Chapter-15/ass15_3.html

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The First Coins Mined by Early Adopters The Spent Coins of Nakamoto Finney’s contribution was cited by many to had been awarded by Nakamoto on 12 January 2009 by 10 BTC. According to Taras,7 it was the only block reward that Nakamoto had spent, block #9 to be precise. The reward of block #9 mined was sent to 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtpTu3S. The transaction was touted to be the first successful P2P transaction put to the test. It was recorded on block #170. The fifth and last spent transaction from the block #9 reward was made on 2009-01-13 03:04:20. The 10 BTC was spent to 1ByLSV2gLRcuqUmfdYcpPQH8Npm8cccsFg and the remaining UTXO to the original address, with 828ef3b079f9c23829c56fe86e85b4a69d9e06e5b54ea597eef5fb3ffef509fe as the TXID. Afterwards, the block #9 reward address has been receiving additional coins from 37 transactions. With coinbase transaction, the block #9 reward address made a total transactions of 43. This address has 67c35f9e5da6beab as its wallet name. From this wallet name,8 we can track the responding wallets and addresses of the whole transactions. It is the public database. As it is, as of 25 Oct. 2018 10:57, Jakarta time, the address of 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtpTu3S has the balance of BTC 18.43055817. Table – Wallet 67c35f9e5da6beab keeping the historical transactions of 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtpTu3S, 20181024 093524 date received from wallet received/sent sent to wallet balance transaction 2018-09-15 13:40:51 b34bc834c790320e +0.001 18.43056 8e8e4148332eefe195c51377d18a95f2c7097 2e829977d9752888ac1dd45e4ab 2018-06-30 15:05:31 e5684e9e288a31a2 +0.17 18.42956 c7bd29267a338ff592209123b99e37bb8431f 0b8511bd485d3d9a68c5f0bb97a 2018-03-27 14:06:10 8d7af20a417457b9 +0.00066593 18.25956 ad38beebfb3f9ecc759787a69ada97c561a11 e1a22355a052e5ab750774e5f8b 2017-11-27 21:44:46 1a3a535c5bba0bd4 +0.0000258 18.25889 0259713cf98049818691cfa9bf8628823a3ea e437e3287ce4896ad3871f65c89 2017-09-05 14:38:11 0a618682c5414f71 +0.0001 18.25887 0b49e4e83c75005c9863ab868fe7d548451f3 8095ac79c3304ff012a815ca451 2017-09-02 22:28:03 5456aa645d3b0bbb +0.00218 18.25877 ba60b4e0437562402caa17ffce31f6f62e414 9986a17b8aa3bab044025763ea9 2017-05-01 01:51:15 ff146cc4a0052739 +0.00080708 18.25659 595cf9da27359b36196ad457acba9a409ef68 f51d6cd130e5449a4f418fb62f1 2016-08-19 17:56:49 Xapo.com +0.0005 18.25578 b6bd983868e1e3944b45dd644832ece3791f (0000038f006f1ff5) 86c494c679ea2a8fcd884f1b2769 2016-05-13 10:01:54 a0437c485d409ca7 +0.0000666 18.25528 c4b968504a34a27482bf0f1f9d9b93b74fddb f3877cfd92e2fde48c6ba8c791c 2016-05-08 08:24:15 94587f8b383d892e +0.00027323 18.25521 f5b204652306e30faa99600994482f6fc9df8 ba12df3576d0833091eb8270e64 2016-05-06 14:24:53 7db51f4476def415 +0.0000543 18.25494 cafeea4014228d575610eea291de6288c2125 f9ec49a078bcb221c1c30648caa 2016-05-05 20:55:22 95e9be5bfbca6bdb +0.00022272 18.25489 1d21fdbbddc8985ead4079261d9db4608f0b 3cc946cb52081c5e347a9cddd63a 2016-05-05 20:55:22 9e2ca7b6c0b6aba8 +0.00022272 18.25466 e82f85e879cba004ff6ed485a4c90b30350aa 900d39327e2e37868504af74799 2016-05-05 20:55:22 fa1786d6d70bcbc9 +0.00022272 18.25444 fc0bffe90fa4bb922c77ce3a9fc86742cb6bd3 8f57a7bf28c900c0470de5137f 2016-05-05 20:55:22 75e993d5df3ecd3b +0.00022272 18.25422 eedbae6778bcf62f7ecd3eaa7bbabdcaf6992e 9284ed2b3cc1c90f3a9fece711 2016-05-05 20:55:22 718460b9588d6199 +0.00022272 18.25399 60b0512e878085d718328b8593b9aeeb50ae 2313660359be4ad6b7a3ae9ad6c3 2016-05-05 20:55:22 ae854dc75f814af2 +0.00022272 18.25377 6f57d4621919f424a26b097d0f6ac17528c7d 9c2519dad5df293af3ff94a6f6b 2016-05-05 20:55:22 8e9a7cab05aee8f3 +0.00022302 18.25355 91367b3361443bedc0b8f1dd45c6d9fb62eb c9c6b23858cffe155c14c080ea78 2016-05-05 20:55:22 d798ffe94dad7d46 +0.00022272 18.25333 41955ccca5522135e14821efeea6b3f4642ca 1af24fac8fe59bd0c3cc098ec0b 2016-05-05 20:55:22 348452539feadc38 +0.00022272 18.2531 23512a72fddd90e7c0e74cfbe3d7cf8240a17 85db967062fe5ed00ae93eb0287

7 Taras, Satoshi only spent 50 BTC. Here's where those coins are now, 20140329, https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=548508.0 8 https://www.walletexplorer.com/wallet/67c35f9e5da6beab

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Sando Sasako Table – Wallet 67c35f9e5da6beab keeping the historical transactions of 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtpTu3S, 20181024 093524 date received from wallet received/sent sent to wallet balance transaction 2016-05-05 20:55:22 496bc0ebc6f8d2d3 +0.00022272 18.25288 43962be4fb4bcdd4a20417b9221383228bae e5c3db95293cfcc47f3e5d7c00f7 2016-05-05 20:55:22 6d27abe1a3bf39cc +0.00022302 18.25266 93a1c16f721c001190d8ee686efa80c534938 d2ee8b49c98454365f56ecfa3fa 2016-05-05 20:50:21 c44e25bc65cef59f +0.00022302 18.25243 c154aedf3df6f980def3aa25742ae4d176f32c 74d43c297cd180e631a1a26f8d 2016-05-05 20:50:21 0b4a820bb0b440fb +0.00022273 18.25221 abb898accecb2d066ca772b9b79cdc2140cf2 a6efe9e050b6e6eef277007f9f8 2016-05-05 20:50:21 46d5e8ce463e22bb +0.00022273 18.25199 dfabb8ce324b16d78f8aa5d66adcfdf823e64c 366eb96e7620ad4f02af25dab2 2016-05-05 20:50:21 cbec541a1a5f074d +0.00022274 18.25177 3f7b8ac6e15cd416e739400cf3bae34c97a8d 9df153364ae2b6e4974ff514621 2016-05-05 20:50:21 95dc05b85da05d76 +0.00022302 18.25154 d2c03b8a2c595674a842a8feced896a150d9d c592c91ff23aa90c82ecd643c0e 2016-05-05 20:50:21 76fc50a13d642965 +0.00022273 18.25132 63c9f255d218b88829582b08a32b84c41b2b a3eacdd38d7ecc883583685bdef9 2016-05-05 20:50:21 726b90d563778671 +0.00022273 18.2511 c4cbda5ea11c056dd08553c11be4c36b64bf4 58ad3cdad525d03ad9e0295ad50 2016-05-05 10:26:21 cf41d32f398c6d78 +0.111899 18.25088 e73a45c936d2ce195f13b5a715614f7d10f94 ff7a6593dc24fcf98bf173941eb 2016-05-04 14:41:54 00000014ea8b260f +0.01701 18.13898 d87ca44bedbba2107a0f8ef732a8ca3857db1 754541e99970ce67da9e29d19ee 2016-05-04 14:06:11 Bitstamp.net +0.0109 18.12197 85bd6e073db458fcc2a1b7f17d7c3ce2b8000 (00000e7158503ed8) 1f88c2bcd63e491f8488d250dba 2016-05-03 17:20:33 ea7124ece2a5312c +0.0001 18.11107 8dd5bd5f6226f15adc1c0d94afcac45c59314 d606616ef805699ed73167502fc 2016-05-03 13:39:52 687bdb971099ccf3 +0.11 18.11097 0fc8aa8f0cf52bae75c17167ad438a6e9a6f9c 72b35991d6a5efbc9a050b6d60 2016-05-02 10:07:57 0aa07f98ecd6efda +0.000666 18.00097 5d607ae88c2caf1329e758ccb1eb8a359f6df 434ee84e03b9e14cea300a85f97 2013-03-27 06:22:50 c3dbb2a572403542 +0.0003 18.0003 20fb69a94413637cb50f65e473f91d2599a04 d5a0bf9bf6a5e9e843df2710ea4 2013-02-08 05:00:43 c3457c39c5978965 +0.00000001 18 1554a02d4eb1c7a73e3736922ed99530e360 784e709896c42e5756e65b2da341 2009-01-12 20:04:20 0a70a24738e696b0 18 828ef3b079f9c23829c56fe86e85b4a69d9e0 -10 6e5b54ea597eef5fb3ffef509fe 2009-01-12 06:34:22 989d63b398531c7a 28 12b5633bad1f9c167d523ad1aa1947b2732a -1 865bf5414eab2f9e5ae5d5c191ba 2009-01-12 06:12:16 b01e861023ccf614 29 591e91f809d716912ca1d4a9295e70c3e78b -1 ab077683f79350f101da64588073 2009-01-12 06:02:13 cb7eab441113a663 30 a16f3ce4dd5deb92d98ef5cf8afeaf0775ebca -10 408f708b2146c4fb42b41e14be 2009-01-12 03:30:25 0cb8998fa9ff330d 40 f4184fc596403b9d638783cf57adfe4c75c60 -10 5f6356fbc91338530e9831e9e16 2009-01-09 03:54:39 50 0437cd7f8525ceed2324359c2d0ba26006d9 +50 2d856a9c20fa0241106ee5a597c9 Source: WalletExplorer.com

What makes Taras’ analysis fascinated and attractive is that the spent coin (of the fifth and last spent transaction of block #9 reward address) in 1ByLSV2gLRcuqUmfdYcpPQH8Npm8cccsFg was later spent again to 1BBz9Z15YpELQ4QP5sEKb1SwxkcmPb5TM on 2009-01-14 20:40:55 with the TXID: a3b0e9e7cddbbe78270fa4182a7675ff00b92872d8df7d14265a2b1e379a9d33. This TXID (a3b0e9e7cddbbe78270fa4182a7675ff00b92872d8df7d14265a2b1e379a9d33) contains 2 other sending addresses to 1 receiving address (1BBz9Z15YpELQ4QP5sEKb1SwxkcmPb5TM). The other 2 sending addresses were 18SH9vwx24L5cTabfkgtGMjF8A56pD9AUJ sending BTC 50 and 15NUwyBYrZcnUgTagsm1A7M2yL2GntpuaZ sending BTC 1. This transaction bore no fee and balanced the address (1BBz9Z15YpELQ4QP5sEKb1SwxkcmPb5TM) by BTC 61, unspent, as of today, 25 Oct. 2018 08.49 Jakarta time. According to Taras, this address (1BBz9Z15YpELQ4QP5sEKb1SwxkcmPb5TM) belonged to Bbz. On 2009-01-13 18:49:42, Bbz was rewarded by BTC 50 to have mined block #360 to an address of 18SH9vwx24L5cTabfkgtGMjF8A56pD9AUJ. On 2009-01-14 20:40:55, Bbz sent the whole BTC 50 to 1BBz9Z15YpELQ4QP5sEKb1SwxkcmPb5TM. This spent was recorded with 2 other transactions with the TXID: a3b0e9e7cddbbe78270fa4182a7675ff00b92872d8df7d14265a2b1e379a9d33, totaled at BTC 61, unspent, as of today, 25 Oct. 2018 08.49 Jakarta time.

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The First Coins Mined by Early Adopters

Chart – The visualisation of transactions and address reuse of 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtpTu3S, Oct. 2018 Source: Modified version of Taras’, Satoshi only spent 50 BTC. Here's where those coins are now, 20181025.

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Sando Sasako Address Wallet ID W’s addresses W’s tx

12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtpTu3S: Historical transactions up to 2018-11-17 67c35f9e5da6beab (we) 1 45

Received Sent Balance Unspent

BTC 50.4309 32 18.43094726 40

BTC 2018-11-17 00:12:21

0.06862237

0.00000678 2018-11-16 21:59:43

0.00308767

0.0001055 2018-09-15 13:34:42

3.84409788

0.001 2018-06-30 15:05:03

0.32654576

0.00001085 2018-03-27 12:57:12

0.00069203 0.0000261 2017-11-27 21:35:48

0.3015

0.0003842 2017-09-05 14:38:11

0.00326765

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First TX 2009-01-09 10:54:39 2009-01-12 10:30:25

Sending Addresses Receiving Addresses TXID: 62102bcef551308d081504342083ebf35d7f082738cc510c5cd94b3f7ecb5e23 Block: #550,371 Bits: 388,648,495 Diff: 6,653,303,141,405.96 Nonce: 2,293,973,727 1Jf4YdDP28ufJ8BLnT6Pa1vF4WbGd 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp x3qwF Tu3S 1P1iyxiizGz6qHsdRrmA2HRipWNQbPy NkU Fee 228 confirmations TXID: 7b9d92b6098a1e5c11e948d9ac1dd18fb18087f6fd4864a4d0413a4345bb8bc7 Block: #550,359 Bits: 388,443,538 Diff: 7,184,404,942,701.79 Nonce: 1,894,546,796 19KDEKRCHgD54cJhspP5dNdRdQT 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp e4DggjA Tu3S 1FvqGWMvZYMuX5XcJhNyKHUXsnU 7W97P7k Fee 240 confirmations TXID: 8e8e4148332eefe195c51377d18a95f2c70972e829977d9752888ac1dd45e4ab Block: #541,525 Bits: 388,503,969 Diff: 7,019,199,231,177.17 Nonce: 3,196,539,554 1DJnkd3HsxV8A88TYdeRW5gGZpB 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp ZMz75dV Tu3S 1ARysyzv7SXHYrAuHWRQL9yxubWc hifBoT Fee 9,074 confirmations TXID: c7bd29267a338ff592209123b99e37bb8431f0b8511bd485d3d9a68c5f0bb97a Block: #529,906 Bits: 389,508,950 Diff: 5,077,499,034,879.02 Nonce: 1,731,673,927 35wQL7iundJiKJZRCKQtab8bFi18Tn 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp h3xo Tu3S 3Q7UkjMj67QMWhwFxLfUbaVwQivrA MowNX Fee 20,693 confirmations

Last TX 2018-11-17 07:23:43 2009-01-13 03:04:20

BTC

Reuse

TX: 2,974

0.00017932 (U)

0.06843627 (U) 0.06861559

TX: 2,297

0.00020977 (U)

0.0027724 (U) 0.00298217

TX: 2,471

0.001 (U)

3.84209788 (S) 3.84309788

TX: 1,987

0.17 (U)

0.15653491 (S) 0.32653491

TXID: ad38beebfb3f9ecc759787a69ada97c561a11e1a22355a052e5ab750774e5f8b Block: #515,394 Bits: 391,203,401 TX: 2,700 Diff: 3,462,542,391,191.56 Nonce: 1,801,674,869 1Piob5mwM8iusooZ1gyE6oNfqd53U 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp 0.00066593 (U) 75cjp Tu3S Fee 35,205 confirmations 0.00066593 TXID: 0259713cf98049818691cfa9bf8628823a3eae437e3287ce4896ad3871f65c89 Block: #496,418 Bits: 402,706,678 Diff: 1,347,001,430,558.57 Nonce: 1,958,274,729 14U334YnVoqzTaP1sQ3e6f2ta5xuaq4 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp YXe Tu3S 13dwF9jac5Xa2NfDJkHdBsxTXg4SktFp Ew Fee 54,181 confirmations

TX 45 5

TX: 2,886

0.0000258 (U)

0.30109 (S) 0.3011158

TXID: 0b49e4e83c75005c9863ab868fe7d548451f38095ac79c3304ff012a815ca451 Block: #483,666 Bits: 402,734,313 TX: 1,544 Diff: 888,171,856,257.32 Nonce: 435,464,517 16Qbbsxp2YoTiXJohRUwtzNF4g6jG 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp 0.0001 (U) udJYb Tu3S 1Nsb6pLr4XAiBBVMpu1sn6xBR4X5k2 0.0026115 (S) AMNJ

bc1q9wmlgxha8wh7x750a9sysss9s07w2t0a0v67gc


The First Coins Mined by Early Adopters Address Wallet ID W’s addresses W’s tx

12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtpTu3S: Historical transactions up to 2018-11-17 67c35f9e5da6beab (we) 1 45

Received Sent Balance Unspent

BTC 50.4309 32 18.43094726 40

First TX 2009-01-09 10:54:39 2009-01-12 10:30:25

Last TX 2018-11-17 07:23:43 2009-01-13 03:04:20

BTC 0.00055615

Sending Addresses Fee

Receiving Addresses 66,933 confirmations

BTC 0.0027115

2017-09-02 22:28:03

TXID: ba60b4e0437562402caa17ffce31f6f62e4149986a17b8aa3bab044025763ea9 Block: #483,210 Bits: 402,734,313 Diff: 888,171,856,257.32 Nonce: 176,473,929 18hLFDvKHCqXdsdnU16RRvfkbpD4 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp c6xwha Tu3S 16Sc7cjzeUeQ49FVoND5SJTtMhSkfun Xmj Fee 67,389 confirmations

0.00327698

0.00105519 2017-05-01 01:49:53

0.01248548

0.00036524 2016-08-19 16:58:22

0.13634082 0.01253608

0.0004 2016-05-13 10:00:22

0.001

0.00002072 2016-05-08 07:59:52

0.00649909

TXID: 595cf9da27359b36196ad457acba9a409ef68f51d6cd130e5449a4f418fb62f1 Block: #464,282 Bits: 402,791,230 Diff: 521,974,519,553.63 Nonce: 3,826,072,845 1Ah4wFJ6S6jSbkRPGnqLfWgWiudiC 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp AT96K Tu3S 17s2S4JE76kWknDzXpFSLAqXyYJrE1e PFE Fee 86,317 confirmations TXID: b6bd983868e1e3944b45dd644832ece3791f86c494c679ea2a8fcd884f1b2769 Block: #425,909 Bits: 402,984,668 Diff: 217,375,482,757.24 Nonce: 2,761,228,019 35mwqShnStDro6uEB4bmsgbyBo8en 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp 6Byfm Tu3S 3Fq28aWZf5SCF6VbhPZf9X33XPGS 39xsbuSvhjUaNSUnZi5o42gmM2gMTJt 833mKS uGf 1Frqd1wTqVUBUkX2shDDAFc1kJcoPn wEZb 337RfngTLRTpU7RT9sKWQWDdmfcd mWnugi 1Gr7WsN8bHBxySaDUY4tDvNiWFh1N zsp3e 15dnFUAeQ6KdS8jwR1nHWMBCFwBv vg12vW 1BG3zaFU3T16UC3Q1GutLWriLizfqZJ a4d Fee 124,690 confirmations TXID: c4b968504a34a27482bf0f1f9d9b93b74fddbf3877cfd92e2fde48c6ba8c791c Block: #411,567 Bits: 403,024,122 Diff: 194,254,820,283.44 Nonce: 2,632,795,136 1MorizeQiisf5WDC5VfPLMod1BvYd 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp bygWF Tu3S 1MorizeQiisf5WDC5VfPLMod1BvYdby gWF Fee 139,081 confirmations TXID: f5b204652306e30faa99600994482f6fc9df8ba12df3576d0833091eb8270e64 Block: #410,787 Bits: 403,056,502 Diff: 178,659,257,772.53 Nonce: 1,091,968,522 1AFqzw5mL3EVqK5FWGcr2HwYu6 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp ZgYiy2Nz Tu3S 1ProTip9x3uoqKDJeMQJdQUCQawDLa uNiF 1rSiiksbK5ukazCzTyoZUaQANCX5cYX Ns 12fXL5fonYtxWg4fFJtuZ3anbP3iNvLJN M 18U4bqVs2HswDTBdc5D2mzTbJCHDF aikhs

bc1q9wmlgxha8wh7x750a9sysss9s07w2t0a0v67gc

TX 45 5

Reuse

TX: 1,945

0.00218 (U)

0.00004179 (S) 0.00222179

TX: 2,387

0.00080708 (U)

0.01131316 (S) 0.01212024

TX: 2,280

0.0005 (U)

0.00184292 (S) 0.0003 (S) 0.03182937 (S) 0.113895 (S) 0.00005461 (S) 0.000055 (S) 0.1484769

TX: 1,575

0.0000666 (U)

0.00091268 (S) 0.00097928

TX: 2,343

0.00027323 (U)

0.00012398 (S) 0.00093581 (S) 0.00027323 (S) 0.00025274 (U)

9


Sando Sasako Address Wallet ID W’s addresses W’s tx

12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtpTu3S: Historical transactions up to 2018-11-17 67c35f9e5da6beab (we) 1 45

Received Sent Balance Unspent

BTC 50.4309 32 18.43094726 40

First TX 2009-01-09 10:54:39 2009-01-12 10:30:25

Last TX 2018-11-17 07:23:43 2009-01-13 03:04:20

BTC

Sending Addresses

Receiving Addresses 1FmvtS66LFh6ycrXDwKRQTexGJw4U WiqDX 3DSh6AnmvBpDJFUz2mnLirMLmTMc Fs9nDm 1mS5TK68ViQHjWxLB8ZR8moJwhJbJ okGy 1FBmoYijXVizfYk25CpiN8Eds9J6YiRD aX 1AFqzw5mL3EVqK5FWGcr2HwYu6Zg Yiy2Nz 139,861 confirmations

BTC 0.000222 (S)

0.0001

Fee

2016-05-06 14:24:53

TXID: cafeea4014228d575610eea291de6288c2125f9ec49a078bcb221c1c30648caa Block: #410,520 Bits: 403,056,502 Diff: 178,659,257,772.53 Nonce: 2,200,671,034 1DWAAHetpH4Vx7yASNiDvyhUzV 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp cp9GiWMM Tu3S Unparsed address [0] / Unable to decode output address 1DWAAHetpH4Vx7yASNiDvyhUzVcp9 GiWMM Fee 140,128 confirmations

0.0098543

0.0001 2016-05-05 21:25:01

0.74266496

0.0003108

TXID: 91367b3361443bedc0b8f1dd45c6d9fb62ebc9c6b23858cffe155c14c080ea78 Block: #410,400 Bits: 403,056,502 Diff: 178,659,257,772.53 Nonce: 3,794,352,064 18qorqcoE3dHk8K2dNmT5NVRpMS 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp wjrq5qu Tu3S 1FRuQ1BiYyfQUtFHW7TGb1mg4gPPz HCuP4 Fee 140,248 confirmations

0.0001571 (U) 0.00379556 (S) 0.00639909

TX: 438

0.0000543 (U)

0.0097 (U) 0.0097543

TX: 745

0.00022302 (U)

0.74235416

0.0003108 20:55:22 0.11217187

0.0003108

10

TX: 745

TXID: 60b0512e878085d718328b8593b9aeeb50ae2313660359be4ad6b7a3ae9ad6c3 1PGyKyyVooZe6y68ArFiR8ZS8Vmaj 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp 0.00022272 (U) BWrxe Tu3S 1C9dCZEFaB8y8tSzDS8LCUUmYZLjE 0.11057131 (S) NhfLe Fee 140,248 confirmations 0.11079403 TXID: 6f57d4621919f424a26b097d0f6ac17528c7d9c2519dad5df293af3ff94a6f6b 13hkyCg9N57eiyU4Wn6Di74f31zoX 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp RoyPg Tu3S 1PGyKyyVooZe6y68ArFiR8ZS8VmajB Wrxe Fee 140,248 confirmations

0.74213114 (S)

TXID: 93a1c16f721c001190d8ee686efa80c534938d2ee8b49c98454365f56ecfa3fa 1Bg6DMWxW9NmKc5cR8RmmW1 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp 0.00022302 (U) N8UVrURi2dZ Tu3S 1BUSorXCs6NHRqvAMhcPXbSHhtdFV 0.11323891 (S) YtvmH Fee 140,248 confirmations 0.11346193

20:55:22 0.11163835

0 (U)

21:24:31 0.11377273

0.0003108

Reuse

0.00016052 (U)

Block: #410,400 Diff: 178,659,257,772.53 Nonce: 3,794,352,064

20:55:22 0.11110483

0.00020492 (S)

2016-05-05

0.0003108

Bits: 403,056,502

TX 45 5

0.00022272 (U)

0.11110483 (S) 0.11132755

TXID: 41955ccca5522135e14821efeea6b3f4642ca1af24fac8fe59bd0c3cc098ec0b 1QHjYiZZn5bJs9xNtr7GHMfnuc4we 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp 0.00022272 (U) QJ1Tb Tu3S 13hkyCg9N57eiyU4Wn6Di74f31zoXRoy 0.11163835 (S) Pg Fee 140,248 confirmations 0.11186107

bc1q9wmlgxha8wh7x750a9sysss9s07w2t0a0v67gc


The First Coins Mined by Early Adopters Address Wallet ID W’s addresses W’s tx

12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtpTu3S: Historical transactions up to 2018-11-17 67c35f9e5da6beab (we) 1 45

Received Sent Balance Unspent

BTC 50.4309 32 18.43094726 40

BTC 20:55:22 0.11270539

0.0003108 20:55:22 0.74053058

0.0003108 20:55:22 0.11323891

0.0003108 20:55:22 0.7410641

0.0003108 20:55:22 0.74159762

0.0003108 20:55:22 0.74213114

0.0003108

First TX 2009-01-09 10:54:39 2009-01-12 10:30:25

Sending Addresses Receiving Addresses TXID: 23512a72fddd90e7c0e74cfbe3d7cf8240a1785db967062fe5ed00ae93eb0287 15QJSfwEoKSLAViWFZ23Ln8AuPt 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp XGcF3je Tu3S 1QHjYiZZn5bJs9xNtr7GHMfnuc4weQJ1 Tb Fee 140,262 confirmations

Last TX 2018-11-17 07:23:43 2009-01-13 03:04:20

BTC

0.00022272 (U)

0.11239459

TXID: 43962be4fb4bcdd4a20417b9221383228baee5c3db95293cfcc47f3e5d7c00f7 1BUSorXCs6NHRqvAMhcPXbSHhtd 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp 0.00022272 (U) FVYtvmH Tu3S 15QJSfwEoKSLAViWFZ23Ln8AuPtXG 0.11270539 (S) cF3je Fee 140,262 confirmations 0.11292811 TXID: e82f85e879cba004ff6ed485a4c90b30350aa900d39327e2e37868504af74799 1QJm6hgf3er2PJ3U6LCNaH2dWdoD 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp 0.00022272 (U) 7wvS78 Tu3S 1NdzHo5YCVS99e5w6rvTFnoVxj773ejF 0.74053058 (S) fH Fee 140,262 confirmations 0.7407533

TXID: eedbae6778bcf62f7ecd3eaa7bbabdcaf6992e9284ed2b3cc1c90f3a9fece711 1FRuQ1BiYyfQUtFHW7TGb1mg4gP 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp PzHCuP4 Tu3S 1CsW7gSQfEUSShHCRFg4fqFJ9B11P5 ez5W Fee 140,262 confirmations

0.00022272 (U)

0.00022272 (U)

0.0003108

TX: 1,234

TXID: d2c03b8a2c595674a842a8feced896a150d9dc592c91ff23aa90c82ecd643c0e 1NmPndoUNkJG6LsKD4doZFaYzqA 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp 0.00022302 (U) QmGPdse Tu3S 1Bg6DMWxW9NmKc5cR8RmmW1N8 0.11377273 (S) UVrURi2dZ Fee 140,249 confirmations 0.11399575 TXID: abb898accecb2d066ca772b9b79cdc2140cf2a6efe9e050b6e6eef277007f9f8 17TURcGZLT3Fe6J1gUUr5yzUKepc 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp 0.00022273 (U) BPbxWA Tu3S 1D3587sxC5LiBydsTp668q71o2mb4em2 0.74319878 (S) Qr Fee 140,249 confirmations 0.74342151

bc1q9wmlgxha8wh7x750a9sysss9s07w2t0a0v67gc

0.74182034

TXID: c154aedf3df6f980def3aa25742ae4d176f32c74d43c297cd180e631a1a26f8d 1D3587sxC5LiBydsTp668q71o2mb4e 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp 0.00022302 (U) m2Qr Tu3S 18qorqcoE3dHk8K2dNmT5NVRpMSwjr 0.74266496 (S) q5qu Fee 140,249 confirmations 0.74288798

21:22:41 0.74373231

0.74159762 (S)

21:23:53 0.74319878

0.0003108

0.74128682

Block: #410,399 Diff: 178,659,257,772.53 Nonce: 1,834,270,344

21:22:54 0.11430655

0.7410641 (S)

2016-05-05

0.0003108

Bits: 403,056,502

Reuse

0.11217187 (S)

TXID: 1d21fdbbddc8985ead4079261d9db4608f0b3cc946cb52081c5e347a9cddd63a 1NdzHo5YCVS99e5w6rvTFnoVxj773 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp 0.00022272 (U) ejFfH Tu3S 1DgzhDWiPagWc3QPJNkwAMjqH9Pqy 0.73999706 (S) XY2zH Fee 140,262 confirmations 0.74021978

TXID: fc0bffe90fa4bb922c77ce3a9fc86742cb6bd38f57a7bf28c900c0470de5137f 1CsW7gSQfEUSShHCRFg4fqFJ9B11 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp P5ez5W Tu3S 1QJm6hgf3er2PJ3U6LCNaH2dWdoD7w vS78 Fee 140,262 confirmations

TX 45 5

11


Sando Sasako Address Wallet ID W’s addresses W’s tx

12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtpTu3S: Historical transactions up to 2018-11-17 67c35f9e5da6beab (we) 1 45

Received Sent Balance Unspent

BTC 50.4309 32 18.43094726 40

First TX 2009-01-09 10:54:39 2009-01-12 10:30:25

Last TX 2018-11-17 07:23:43 2009-01-13 03:04:20

BTC

Sending Addresses

Receiving Addresses

BTC

21:21:11 0.11484008

TXID: 63c9f255d218b88829582b08a32b84c41b2ba3eacdd38d7ecc883583685bdef9 19dPRcQWvStor5Mcy8K5mAqvPqcij 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp 0.00022273 (U) dqq3V Tu3S 1NmPndoUNkJG6LsKD4doZFaYzqAQ 0.11430655 (S) mGPdse Fee 140,249 confirmations 0.11452928

0.0003108 21:20:30 0.74426584

0.0003108 21:19:36 0.11537361

0.0003108 21:18:42 0.74458895

0.00010037 2016-05-05 10:23:46

2.88803324

0.00006776 2016-05-04 14:41:54

0.017088 0.000078 2016-05-04 14:06:11

0.01506391 0.10145048 40 3.24785189 5.59303 70.93324783

12

TXID: dfabb8ce324b16d78f8aa5d66adcfdf823e64c366eb96e7620ad4f02af25dab2 1JbAniQK4LnAbvDcYxVJaLsimXrPq 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp xDc8k Tu3S 17TURcGZLT3Fe6J1gUUr5yzUKepcBP bxWA Fee 140,249 confirmations

0.00022273 (U)

Reuse

0.74395504

TXID: 3f7b8ac6e15cd416e739400cf3bae34c97a8d9df153364ae2b6e4974ff514621 1B8W8CrmQ4a5mvtvE5BDrRPBwR 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp 0.00022274 (U) W2MjNjCU Tu3S 1JbAniQK4LnAbvDcYxVJaLsimXrPqxD 0.74426584 (S) c8k Fee 140,249 confirmations 0.74448858

TX: 2,724 ✔

2.77606648 (S) 0.111899 (U)

2.88796548

TXID: d87ca44bedbba2107a0f8ef732a8ca3857db1754541e99970ce67da9e29d19ee Block: #410,203 Bits: 403,056,502 TX: 3,382 Diff: 178,659,257,772.53 Nonce: 437,491,014 17AXkmfwQF2EduaYBgF8kqn3XvG 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp 0.01701 (U) pFB6jpH Tu3S Fee 140,459 confirmations 0.01701 TXID: 85bd6e073db458fcc2a1b7f17d7c3ce2b80001f88c2bcd63e491f8488d250dba Block: #410,201 Bits: 403,056,502 Diff: 178,659,257,772.53 Nonce: 1,616,807,337 3BwaQ4PmaiFyGzpEbhDErNRJRpkR 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp NYqQyU Tu3S 3KuLojun3mnY62zY2MZJt4fpLojwo 19iaoyoEYHgg1nL8SDYA3bKthiusA2E 9Ecxw 9Ts 3LoJ4pPq9RJUEToenZuC4AZXtbaiG 1EMvLC6HsC1mr9DvSbcarJLjbJixvM4 jh4HE mcT 3QnsmojaZB4eW2AbKLAL3MRCbx 1F4j7KQRCWkqSHEbrWg6vDSSw13PF ch5WZm3t rFnn3 34A5AbusDYE1aEdigr39tP1LgZKMh 1GVACizsr7wRdpXC5Jtcrrjt9knEFKiK1 2C5dQ a 38Ww65vR3EoW2a1LUyYUzVvufZ 33s6B5emccJo8K5vEZcF6DnEqH5T2G7 Qyx3kGPZ wRz 3BiVpGAVDGSrY5PxoNr8gqLX7vUzjP aKnP

0.74373231 (S)

TXID: c4cbda5ea11c056dd08553c11be4c36b64bf458ad3cdad525d03ad9e0295ad50 12xABoLCHieff2GgWgm2sxEa3sVau 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp 0.00022273 (U) GaxTN Tu3S 19dPRcQWvStor5Mcy8K5mAqvPqcijdq 0.11484008 (S) q3V Fee 140,249 confirmations 0.11506281

TXID: e73a45c936d2ce195f13b5a715614f7d10f94ff7a6593dc24fcf98bf173941eb Block: #410,335 Bits: 403,056,502 Diff: 178,659,257,772.53 Nonce: 3,022,072,156 123456789vRagBRfuB1i24Fz81bpcQ 123456789vRagBRfuB1i24Fz81bpcQ5V 5VeY eY 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp Tu3S Fee 140,327 confirmations

TX 45 5

TX: 1,424

0.0109 (U)

0.86490272 (S) 0.14295312 (S) 0.05 (S) 50 (S) 30.000207 (S) 38.8211766 (S)

bc1q9wmlgxha8wh7x750a9sysss9s07w2t0a0v67gc


The First Coins Mined by Early Adopters Address Wallet ID W’s addresses W’s tx

12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtpTu3S: Historical transactions up to 2018-11-17 67c35f9e5da6beab (we) 1 45

Received Sent Balance Unspent

BTC 50.4309 32 18.43094726 40

First TX 2009-01-09 10:54:39 2009-01-12 10:30:25

Last TX 2018-11-17 07:23:43 2009-01-13 03:04:20

BTC 0.00050467

Sending Addresses Fee

Receiving Addresses 140,461 confirmations

BTC 119.89013944

2016-05-03 17:13:03

TXID: 8dd5bd5f6226f15adc1c0d94afcac45c59314d606616ef805699ed73167502fc Block: #410,055 Bits: 403,056,502 Diff: 178,659,257,772.53 Nonce: 3,045,619,794 39RichZ7KAMQnXkdfCTVzDsKm6c 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp MyTFYZW Tu3S 1CuVQFM46H8zaEt6qWYCaUFvMjtw3 Sht8B Fee 140,607 confirmations

0.005

0.0003 2016-05-03 13:34:00

0.1114875

0.000113 2016-05-02 09:49:51

0.004239

0.000113 2013-03-27 06:17:08

0.06731453

0.0005 2013-02-08 04:55:10

0.01076919 0.01066731

0.0005 2009-01-12 20:04:20

TXID: 0fc8aa8f0cf52bae75c17167ad438a6e9a6f9c72b35991d6a5efbc9a050b6d60 Block: #410,033 Bits: 403,056,502 Diff: 178,659,257,772.53 Nonce: 3,554,301,074 1KcMWYkemRWCKdkDD7r9eb5vE 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp Cpb2sM9Nc Tu3S 1Agshxn4KQxPaP3zPPU87ogqnYkz96v 73V Fee 140,629 confirmations TXID: 5d607ae88c2caf1329e758ccb1eb8a359f6df434ee84e03b9e14cea300a85f97 Block: #409,857 Bits: 403,056,502 Diff: 178,659,257,772.53 Nonce: 2,292,455,983 1LkMcHnz95Divcxzq3N7BQmG26w 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp yPDhUGr Tu3S 1P1z2ibHUeZJQwjBb7ryim7CZNsx9Mo CMH Fee 140,805 confirmations TXID: 20fb69a94413637cb50f65e473f91d2599a04d5a0bf9bf6a5e9e843df2710ea4 Block: #228,208 Bits: 436,371,822 Diff: 6,695,826.28 Nonce: 867,162,230 1By5DQidGVrNQN164MVKEz4nPS 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp nbcZ2Fyn Tu3S 142gnfJAd7w7w3BSm5m4yPPeu1ehPoQ dg2 Fee 322,454 confirmations

0.0001 (U)

Reuse

0.0046 (S) 0.0047

TX: 1,909

0.11 (U)

0.0013745 (S) 0.1113745

TX: 3,119

0.000666 (U)

0.00346 (S) 0.004126

TX: 385

0.0003 (U)

0.06651453 (S) 0.06681453

TXID: 1554a02d4eb1c7a73e3736922ed99530e360784e709896c42e5756e65b2da341 Block: #220,151 Bits: 436,543,292 TX: 570 Diff: 3,275,464.59 Nonce: 2,535,064,120 159VNkSATDxiwiawfe55em5iEcvZT 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp 0.00000001 (U) LiB34 Tu3S 14bcK5XVcj3CWmbyo2A2wMwxaij 1Pw1r4ZiJnLc6th2trhnux5aeDsjVnaojg 0.0025 (S) BbsipDS 1PXHRQHG3Zy3y1JzU9X466nSPvYj9 0.01843649 (S) YjGiB Fee 330,511 confirmations 0.0209365

0 2009-01-12 06:34:22

TXID: 12b5633bad1f9c167d523ad1aa1947b2732a865bf5414eab2f9e5ae5d5c191ba Block: #183 Bits: 486,604,799 TX: 2

bc1q9wmlgxha8wh7x750a9sysss9s07w2t0a0v67gc

TX: 3,103

TXID: 828ef3b079f9c23829c56fe86e85b4a69d9e06e5b54ea597eef5fb3ffef509fe Block: #248 Bits: 486,604,799 Diff: 1 Nonce: 3,552,595,225 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMe 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp FtpTu3S Tu3S 1ByLSV2gLRcuqUmfdYcpPQH8Npm8c ccsFg Fee 550,446 confirmations

28

TX 45 5

TX: 2

18

10

28

13


Sando Sasako Address Wallet ID W’s addresses W’s tx

12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtpTu3S: Historical transactions up to 2018-11-17 67c35f9e5da6beab (we) 1 45

Received Sent Balance Unspent

BTC 50.4309 32 18.43094726 40

First TX 2009-01-09 10:54:39 2009-01-12 10:30:25

Last TX 2018-11-17 07:23:43 2009-01-13 03:04:20

Sending Addresses Diff: 1 Nonce: 3,235,118,355 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMe FtpTu3S

Receiving Addresses

BTC

BTC

29

12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp 28 Tu3S 13HtsYzne8xVPdGDnmJX8gHgBZerAfJ 1 GEf 550,511 confirmations 29

0

Fee

2009-01-12 06:12:16

TXID: 591e91f809d716912ca1d4a9295e70c3e78bab077683f79350f101da64588073 Block: #182 Bits: 486,604,799 Diff: 1 Nonce: 2,662,131,500 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMe 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp FtpTu3S Tu3S 1LzBzVqEeuQyjD2mRWHes3dgWrT9tit xvq Fee 550,512 confirmations

30

0 2009-01-12 06:02:13

40

0 2009-01-12 03:30:25

50

0

TXID: a16f3ce4dd5deb92d98ef5cf8afeaf0775ebca408f708b2146c4fb42b41e14be Block: #181 Bits: 486,604,799 Diff: 1 Nonce: 792,669,465 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMe 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp FtpTu3S Tu3S 1DUDsfc23Dv9sPMEk5RsrtfzCw5ofi5s VW Fee 550,513 confirmations TXID: f4184fc596403b9d638783cf57adfe4c75c605f6356fbc91338530e9831e9e16 Block: #170 Bits: 486,604,799 Diff: 1 Nonce: 1,889,418,792 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMe 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp FtpTu3S Tu3S 1Q2TWHE3GMdB6BZKafqwxXtWAWg Ft5Jvm3 Fee 550,524 confirmations

TX 45 5

Reuse

TX: 2

29

1

30

TX: 2

30

10

40

TX: 2

40

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50

2009-01-09 03:54:39

TXID: 0437cd7f8525ceed2324359c2d0ba26006d92d856a9c20fa0241106ee5a597c9 Block: #9 Bits: 486,604,799 TX: 1 Diff: 1 Nonce: 1,397,702,696 Coinbase / No Inputs (Newly 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtp 50 Generated Coins) Tu3S 0 Fee 550,685 confirmations 50 Source: walletexplorer, bitinfocharts, blockexplorer, blockchain, datafluisteraar.io, bitcoinwhoswho, btc.com

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The First Coins Mined by Early Adopters Coins Spent by Early Adopters Some cypherpunks were the early adopters of bitcoin. Its mailing list (CML) contains the partiicipating opponents by thousands. Two months after the mailing list was created in Nov. 1992, 9 threads posted by different 9 OPs (original posters) received 37 responses. The total (redundant) threads of 112 generated 191 responses. For more info, cf "The Cypherpunks Mailing List". Upon the official release of bitcoin software on 31 Oct. 2008 in the cryptography list, the surviving CML to date, there were 27 responders in Nov. 2008, directly and not. Upon the release of Bitcoin (client) v.01, the early responders in Jan. 2009 were 17. Only 7 of 17 responders of Jan. 2009 were also the responders of Nov. 2008.9 It means that more than 40% of the cypherpunks community were the bitcoin enthusiasts. Otherwise, they kept on silent due to the issue. The early 7 bitcoin enthusiasts were dan at geer.org, Hal Finney, John Levine, Nicolas Williams, Ray Dillinger, Steven M. Bellovin, and Zooko O'Whielacronx. In "The First Coins Mined by Early Adopters", we can witness how Hal Finney got the first bitcoins, through the screenshot of his wallet. Finney was amongst of many as the receivers of first coinbases. On 14 April 2013 04:19:19 AM, in a bitcointalk.org forum, theymos came forward admitting that he was amongst the many of first-hands to mine bitcoins. theymos broke the very basic assumption and perception of Lerner and Taras and many others that Satoshi was and had been alone to mine bitcoin with a single PC. theymos also posted a screenshot of his wallet in this link http://i.imgur.com/w57rtbs.png, presenting the early coinbases mined by date up to the minutes detail. The following is theymos' sentences: "Do I get to be Satoshi too? I was off by only a few days... I know first-hand that there were several different people who mined before January 2010. It's kind of funny that history I've lived through is being questioned..." Nevertheless, we can not prove to a question that theymos was one of the early magnificent seven or not.10 Should Satoshi spend and/or liquidate his coins holding is up to him. Should Satoshi want to be rich and powerful in politics, he could wind up his fortune for cash, fiat currencies, financial instruments, physical assets, or elses. You should have learnt one's psyche and Maslow's hierarchical human needs. It takes one to know one. The analogue applies to other coin hoarders. Where and when they want to cash out is up to them to decide. John W. Ratcliff (jratcliff63367), another blockchain rookie analyst dared to claim and assume that the rise and ressurected zombie bitcoins to the marketplace could wreak havoc and cause an enormous amount of disruption.11 Cliff proudly claimed that 30% of all bitcoins in existence are zombie coins, untouched for over a year and a half and likely lost forever. Cliff took Lerner's claim to Satoshi's coin as a true hard cold facts. Cliff named the zombie coins as 'The Sleeping Dragon Hoard' and the rise of zombie coins as 'The Kraken has Awakened’.

9

http://www.metzdowd.com/pipermail/cryptography/. Sergio Demian Lerner, Satoshi's Fortune lower bound is 100M USD, 20130415, https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=175996.0;all 11 John W. Ratcliff, Rise of the Zombie Bitcoins, 20140622, https://letstalkbitcoin.com/blog/post/rise-of-thezombie-bitcoins 10

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Sando Sasako Cliff surely is a marketer to put trivial and useless names on everything. Cliff categorised zombie coins by 6 classes, that is Coinbase50, Coinbase25, ColdStorage, OldUsed, Dust, Alive. There has no Coinbase25 standing left alone, but broken into pieces as they are the rewards split by the pooled mining operators. Coldstorage contains the addresses with coins never unspent. The unspent addresses have coins a bit lesser than the total coinbase50.

Chart – theymos’ bitcoin wallet of early coinbases Source: http://i.imgur.com/w57rtbs.png

Like Lerner and Taras, Cliff is another rookie to suggest Satoshi to come forward to the public. Retarded questions were asked and answered by Cliff himself. Likewise his comment to the small spent transactions to the richest list (pubkey) addresses, among other things were spamming, to beg for money, advertise their website. Ridiculous. What do innovators really want? Making and providing some changes, useful enough to the society, open and the whole. Not the closed societies, merely the individuals', just like Chaum's e-cash. The

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The First Coins Mined by Early Adopters right question should be thrown out is at whose costs and disadvantages? The central banks of course, with their crouches and scoundrels, namely the market makers. By inventing the term zombie coins, Cliff surely does not know the usual and regular term used in any trading position. Cliff does not know also about one's liquidity preferences. Wild guessing and assumptions should not be exposed in written, but to reveal how blindful you are in defining an elephant. By using Cliff's data on file 'ZombieOutput.csv', providing the data for the period of 2009010320140813, Cliff's inference gets busted by claiming 15coobWGLz5rTPPLwMqDrC848g5rSqgXX1 as the oldest address mined on 30 Jan. 2009 just to be spent at once on 6 Feb. 2014 09:35:52 to 2 different addresses, that is 13DTRFUwjrKkFRkvpREokuRUg1GGyhhbAA - (Spent) 1.28868996 BTC and 1AgMkZsZykgKW8BQmjyybKJG9kiBZfm9dK - (Spent) 48.71031004 BTC.12 Here is the exact words of Cliff's: "Realize that this first address is a Coinbase reward from block #2,400! This is the oldest address, 15coobWGLz5rTPPLwMqDrC848g5rSqgXX1, which mined a block on January 30, 2009 (just a few weeks after Bitcoin was started), and then it was spent on February 6, 2014. Was this Satoshi?" Generated on 11 Jan. 2009 01:00:54, 1AiBYt8XbsdyPAELFpcSwRpu45eb2bArMf was the oldest coinbase spent on 2011-06-14 05:22:23 to 2 addresses, 1CpzxgNm3Ejoi9SJhkPnKTnTeP8yKTtMuD (0.43 BTC) and 16ds1vC8yuFkYogbafQjMJZXYsC4xbXdEX (50 BTC). The transaction ID was 5c85ed63469aa9971b5d01063dbb8bcdafd412b2f51a3d24abf2e310c028bbf8. It was recorded on block #130,667, difficulty of 567,269.53, and nonce 4,023,445,531. The second largest and biggest mistake of Cliff's data was with his 'ValueChange' column. As much as 159 addresses had the same largest ValueChange, that is by 184,467,439,616 BTC. The second largest ValueChange was 111,114.6172 BTC. The observed period was 20090103-20140813. See section of “DPR”. The third mistake of Cliff's data was with his 'BalanceAfter' column. On 5 June 2014, this 12higDjoCCNXSA95xZMWUdPvXNmkAduhWv was calculated by Cliff to be transacted by the amount of 101 BTC, reducing its balance from 77,624.3594 BTC to 77,523.3594 BTC. According to walletexplorer.com, the ever largest balance of 12higDjoCCNXSA95xZMWUdPvXNmkAduhWv happened on 4 June 2011 04:35:47, as an 0.001 BTC was added and set the balance to the level of 77,624.361.13 With the total of 114 transactions, 12higDjoCCNXSA95xZMWUdPvXNmkAduhWv had received 77,644.48835537 BTC, whereas its last transaction was made on 4 April 2018 23:41:52, by sending 50.00777083 BTC to 3BBMnVk4GyeD9Z7TjeXDvsTnZhCrBAeosk. Its transaction ID was 48e6a3f79e93a460f4330d6553a7487768b8836fefb0caa90faf38e9e3a14487. The largest zombie events by the amount of transactions, that is by 403, happened on 19 Nov. 2013 involving 14,112.9375 BTC. On the other hand, the largest zombie events by the BTC transacted was made on 6 March 2014, involving 46 transactions worth 201,971.2344 BTC. On another occasion, Khaosan reconciled the perspectives presented by Taras, Lerner, and Cliff. Khaosan also cited king-six's opinion in regard to the spending of early coinbases. king-six perceived 12 John W. Ratcliff, A History of Zombie Events, 20140801, https://letstalkbitcoin.com/blog/post/a-history-ofzombie-events 13 walletexplorer.com, Address 12higDjoCCNXSA95xZMWUdPvXNmkAduhWv, part of wallet [001f3ec513], https://www.walletexplorer.com/address/12higDjoCCNXSA95xZMWUdPvXNmkAduhWv

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Sando Sasako that the spent of early coinbases was based and originated by the fear of the insecurity provided by the earliest wallets secured with truecrypt (TC) volumes. TC has been abandoned and deemed potentially insecure. See “The Moves to A More Secured Wallet�.14

14

18

Venzen Khaosan, Earliest Bitcoins Seen Moving, 20140804, https://www.ccn.com/earliest-bitcoins-seen-moving/

bc1q9wmlgxha8wh7x750a9sysss9s07w2t0a0v67gc


The First Coins Mined by Early Adopters The Moves to A More Secured Wallet Wallet security has become the utmost concern for coin hoarders. In its earliest days, bitcoin wallet is secured with truecrypt volumes. As time went by, truecrypt was later found and deemed to be potentially insecure. Therefore, the urge to abandon truecrypt has created massive spent transactions of early coinbases. More security features and measures have been developed. Multi-signature clients were and have been one of the new ones. The possibility to work with modern processors and support 'Trusted Computing' are other features to harden bitcoin wallets. In Finney's dying bed on 19 March 2013, he claimed that new features were "almost ready to release. I just have to do the documentation."15 Even Finney himself, on the same post, wrote and claimed that his bitcoins, kept in his old wallet, were later transferred into an offline wallet. Finney did that as he found that in late 2010, bitcoin eventually had monetary value and climbed up to real money. The move was a means to store bitcoin as a monetary value and expected to be worth to Finney's heirs. The discussions over inheriting bitcoins are of more than academic interest. Finney also wrote that his bitcoins are stored in a safe deposit box. As his son and daughter are tech savvy, Finney thought his coins were safe enough. Finney was comfortable with his legacy. Here is the short recap. Bitcoin began operational on 3 Jan. 2009. At the start of 2009, Finney claimed that he was in the best shape of his life. In August 2009, Finney was diagnosed with ALS. Finney announced his illness on 5 Oct. 2009. In March 2013, Finney was essentially paralysed. Until his death on 28 Aug. 2014, Finney was still working on bcflick, an experimental software using Trusted Computing to strengthen bitcoin wallets. Died at 58 years old, Finney's body was cryopreserved by the Alcor Life Extension Foundation. Finney's contribution to the successful of bitcoin had a long history, way back then. The Cypherpunk Mail List keeps Finney's proof of work on bitcoin. Finney's last work was bcflick16, the hardened bitcoin wallet. As suggested by Mike Hearn in March 2012,17 Finney implemented the Flicker software of Jon McCune. Unfortunately, Jon McCune left CMU (Carnegie Mellon University) for Google. On 19 March 2013, gmaxwell notified Finney that he ordered an extra TPM/XMHF capable system to run bcflick. It was to avoid the risk of bricking his laptop messing around with it.18 Hearn's focus was on security hardening over bitcoin infrastructure. A TC (trusted computing) platform contains a chip called a TPM. It can be standalone, but often integrated into the southbridge. The TPM is a tamper resistant crypto chip. It's important to understand that a TPM is not a crypto accelerator. TPMs are very slow as they provide a repository for cryptographic keys that is difficult to compromise even by a physically present and determined attacker. Before his post about bcflick, Finney commented Hearn's OP on 1 Sept. 2012. The developers of Flicker and TrustVisor had enabled TrustVisor to be ported to xmhf, a hypervisor framework built 15

Hal Finney, Bitcoin and me (Hal Finney), 20130319, https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=155054.msg1643833#msg1643833 16 Hal Finney, [ANN] bcflick - using TPM's and Trusted Computing to strengthen Bitcoin wallets, 20130317, https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=154290.0 17 Mike Hearn, Avoiding theft using trusted computing, 20120305, https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=67508.0;all 18 TPM stands for trusted platform module. XMHF stands for eXtensible and Modular Hypervisor Framework. https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=155054.msg1643945#msg1643945

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Sando Sasako around TC. The xmhf porting enables Intel architecture to work on, following AMD's footstep in TC implementation.19 Four years earlier, in July 2008, both Finney and Hearn had conversed on trusted computing. It was three months before the bitcoin whitepaper surfaced.20 To note, Hearn was hired by Google by mid August 2006 to ensure that the Google services in Switzerland are always available and fast. In 2014, Hearn quit Google to run his own company, Vinumeris, to date.21 That same year, 2014, Gavin Andresen stepped back from his day-to-day role and gave the job of lead maintainer to Wladimir J. van der Laan, a Dutch programmer. As “lead maintainer”, Andersen always sought consensus. On few occasions, where there was irresolvable disagreement, Andersen made the final call, acting as a sort of “benevolent dictator.” Andresen was a close collaborator of Hearn's.22 In bitcointalk.org. Hearn's first appearance (20101214 05:38:54 PM) was less than 2 days after the last appearance of Nakamoto (20101212 06:22:33 PM). Hearn's first post was asking to buy hundreds of bitcoins with CHF or GBP.23 In Oct. 2010, bitcoin was priced at $0.125; and took parity with USD during Feb.-April 2011. Hearn exposed his extrovert personality through Mike's Diary in wordpress.com in 2008, and right after the disappearance of Satoshi. Hearn's silence began when Satoshi and bitcoin started to appear. Hearn silenced his Facebook's post for the period of 23 July 2007 up to 8 March 2011. Based on these crucial factors and others, SkyscraperFarms speculated that Mike Hearn is Satoshi Nakamoto.24 In his Google+ status, Hearn wrote that he quit bitcoin in Jan. 2016. In a reddit.com forum in August 2017, Hearn replied to the request of CipherionX in regard to Hearn's emails with Satoshi.25 CipherionX also posted the links to Hearn's emails with Satoshi in bitcointalk.org.26 Likewise Satoshi's first goodbye to Hearn on 2013-04-23 15:40 and later to Gavin and other core developers.27

19 Hal Finney's comment on Hearn's OP, Avoiding theft using trusted computing, 20120901, https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=67508.msg1153102#msg1153102 20 sourceforge.net, tboot-devel — Developer support, July 2008, https://sourceforge.net/p/tboot/mailman/tbootdevel/?viewmonth=200807&style=flat 21 Mike Hearn, Google, 200160815, http://web.archive.org/web/20090514053312/http://mikehearn.wordpress.com:80/2006/08/ 22 Nathaniel Popper, A Bitcoin Believer’s Crisis of Faith, NY Times, 20160114, https://www.nytimes.com/2016/01/17/business/dealbook/the-bitcoin-believer-who-gave-up.html. cf Mike Hearn, The resolution of the Bitcoin experiment, 20160114, https://blog.plan99.net/the-resolution-of-the-bitcoin-experimentdabb30201f7 23 Mike Hearn, Want to buy BitCoins for CHF or GBP, 20101214, https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=2270.msg30122#msg30122 24 SkyscraperFarms, Could Satoshi Nakamoto be Mike Hearn?, 20170903, https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=2146520.0;all 25 CipherionX, Never before seen Mike Hearn - Satoshi Nakamoto e-mails, 20170811 23:38:40 GMT, https://www.reddit.com/r/btc/comments/6t2ci2/never_before_seen_mike_hearn_satoshi_nakamoto/dliizv6/. cf https://nakamotostudies.org/uncategorized/mike-hearn-on-satoshi-emails/ 26 CipherionX, New Satoshi Emails, 20170811, https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=2080206.0 27 Mike Hearn' comment on BrannigansLaw's OP, Could Satoshi come back and tell us what he/her thinks about the block size?, 20130225 12:48:54 PM, https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=145850.msg1558053#msg1558053

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The First Coins Mined by Early Adopters

Index 00000014ea8b260f, 8 0000038f006f1ff5, 7 00000e7158503ed8, 9 0259713cf98049818691cfa9bf8628823a3eae437e3287ce4896ad387 1f65c89, 6, 13 0437cd7f8525ceed2324359c2d0ba26006d92d856a9c20fa0241106ee 5a597c9, 9, 25 0a618682c5414f71, 6 0a70a24738e696b0, 9 0aa07f98ecd6efda, 9 0b49e4e83c75005c9863ab868fe7d548451f38095ac79c3304ff012a81 5ca451, 6, 13 0b4a820bb0b440fb, 8 0cb8998fa9ff330d, 9 0fc8aa8f0cf52bae75c17167ad438a6e9a6f9c72b35991d6a5efbc9a050 b6d60, 9, 22 123456789vRagBRfuB1i24Fz81bpcQ5VeY, 21 12b5633bad1f9c167d523ad1aa1947b2732a865bf5414eab2f9e5ae5d 5c191ba, 9, 24 12cbQLTFMXRnSzktFkuoG3eHoMeFtpTu3S, 6, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25 12fXL5fonYtxWg4fFJtuZ3anbP3iNvLJNM, 15 12higDjoCCNXSA95xZMWUdPvXNmkAduhWv, 28 12xABoLCHieff2GgWgm2sxEa3sVauGaxTN, 20 13DTRFUwjrKkFRkvpREokuRUg1GGyhhbAA, 28 13dwF9jac5Xa2NfDJkHdBsxTXg4SktFpEw, 13 13hkyCg9N57eiyU4Wn6Di74f31zoXRoyPg, 17 13HtsYzne8xVPdGDnmJX8gHgBZerAfJGEf, 24 142gnfJAd7w7w3BSm5m4yPPeu1ehPoQdg2, 23 14bcK5XVcj3CWmbyo2A2wMwxaijBbsipDS, 23 14U334YnVoqzTaP1sQ3e6f2ta5xuaq4YXe, 13 1554a02d4eb1c7a73e3736922ed99530e360784e709896c42e5756e6 5b2da341, 9, 23 159VNkSATDxiwiawfe55em5iEcvZTLiB34, 23 15coobWGLz5rTPPLwMqDrC848g5rSqgXX1, 28 15dnFUAeQ6KdS8jwR1nHWMBCFwBvvg12vW, 15 15NUwyBYrZcnUgTagsm1A7M2yL2GntpuaZ, 10 15QJSfwEoKSLAViWFZ23Ln8AuPtXGcF3je, 18 16ds1vC8yuFkYogbafQjMJZXYsC4xbXdEX, 28 16Qbbsxp2YoTiXJohRUwtzNF4g6jGudJYb, 13 16Sc7cjzeUeQ49FVoND5SJTtMhSkfunXmj, 14 17AXkmfwQF2EduaYBgF8kqn3XvGpFB6jpH, 21 17s2S4JE76kWknDzXpFSLAqXyYJrE1ePFE, 14 17TURcGZLT3Fe6J1gUUr5yzUKepcBPbxWA, 20 18hLFDvKHCqXdsdnU16RRvfkbpD4c6xwha, 14 18qorqcoE3dHk8K2dNmT5NVRpMSwjrq5qu, 16, 19 18SH9vwx24L5cTabfkgtGMjF8A56pD9AUJ, 10 18U4bqVs2HswDTBdc5D2mzTbJCHDFaikhs, 15 19dPRcQWvStor5Mcy8K5mAqvPqcijdqq3V, 20 19iaoyoEYHgg1nL8SDYA3bKthiusA2E9Ts, 21 19KDEKRCHgD54cJhspP5dNdRdQTe4DggjA, 12 1a3a535c5bba0bd4, 6 1AFqzw5mL3EVqK5FWGcr2HwYu6ZgYiy2Nz, 15, 16 1AgMkZsZykgKW8BQmjyybKJG9kiBZfm9dK, 28 1Agshxn4KQxPaP3zPPU87ogqnYkz96v73V, 22 1Ah4wFJ6S6jSbkRPGnqLfWgWiudiCAT96K, 14 1AiBYt8XbsdyPAELFpcSwRpu45eb2bArMf, 28 1ARysyzv7SXHYrAuHWRQL9yxubWchifBoT, 12 1B8W8CrmQ4a5mvtvE5BDrRPBwRW2MjNjCU, 21 1BBz9Z15YpELQ4QP5sEKb1SwxkcmPb5TM, 10 1BG3zaFU3T16UC3Q1GutLWriLizfqZJa4d, 15 1Bg6DMWxW9NmKc5cR8RmmW1N8UVrURi2dZ, 17, 19 1BUSorXCs6NHRqvAMhcPXbSHhtdFVYtvmH, 17, 18 1By5DQidGVrNQN164MVKEz4nPSnbcZ2Fyn, 23 1ByLSV2gLRcuqUmfdYcpPQH8Npm8cccsFg, 6, 10, 24 1C9dCZEFaB8y8tSzDS8LCUUmYZLjENhfLe, 17 1CpzxgNm3Ejoi9SJhkPnKTnTeP8yKTtMuD, 28 1CsW7gSQfEUSShHCRFg4fqFJ9B11P5ez5W, 19 1CuVQFM46H8zaEt6qWYCaUFvMjtw3Sht8B, 22 1d21fdbbddc8985ead4079261d9db4608f0b3cc946cb52081c5e347a9 cddd63a, 7, 18 1D3587sxC5LiBydsTp668q71o2mb4em2Qr, 19, 20 1DgzhDWiPagWc3QPJNkwAMjqH9PqyXY2zH, 18 1DJnkd3HsxV8A88TYdeRW5gGZpBZMz75dV, 12

bc1q9wmlgxha8wh7x750a9sysss9s07w2t0a0v67gc

1DUDsfc23Dv9sPMEk5RsrtfzCw5ofi5sVW, 24 1DWAAHetpH4Vx7yASNiDvyhUzVcp9GiWMM, 16 1EMvLC6HsC1mr9DvSbcarJLjbJixvM4mcT, 21 1F4j7KQRCWkqSHEbrWg6vDSSw13PFrFnn3, 22 1FBmoYijXVizfYk25CpiN8Eds9J6YiRDaX, 16 1FmvtS66LFh6ycrXDwKRQTexGJw4UWiqDX, 15 1Frqd1wTqVUBUkX2shDDAFc1kJcoPnwEZb, 14 1FRuQ1BiYyfQUtFHW7TGb1mg4gPPzHCuP4, 16, 19 1FvqGWMvZYMuX5XcJhNyKHUXsnU7W97P7k, 12 1Gr7WsN8bHBxySaDUY4tDvNiWFh1Nzsp3e, 14 1GVACizsr7wRdpXC5Jtcrrjt9knEFKiK1a, 22 1JbAniQK4LnAbvDcYxVJaLsimXrPqxDc8k, 20, 21 1Jf4YdDP28ufJ8BLnT6Pa1vF4WbGdx3qwF, 12 1KcMWYkemRWCKdkDD7r9eb5vECpb2sM9Nc, 22 1LkMcHnz95Divcxzq3N7BQmG26wyPDhUGr, 23 1LzBzVqEeuQyjD2mRWHes3dgWrT9titxvq, 24 1MorizeQiisf5WDC5VfPLMod1BvYdbygWF, 15 1mS5TK68ViQHjWxLB8ZR8moJwhJbJokGy, 16 1NdzHo5YCVS99e5w6rvTFnoVxj773ejFfH, 18 1NmPndoUNkJG6LsKD4doZFaYzqAQmGPdse, 19, 20 1Nsb6pLr4XAiBBVMpu1sn6xBR4X5k2AMNJ, 13 1P1iyxiizGz6qHsdRrmA2HRipWNQbPyNkU, 12 1P1z2ibHUeZJQwjBb7ryim7CZNsx9MoCMH, 23 1PGyKyyVooZe6y68ArFiR8ZS8VmajBWrxe, 17 1Piob5mwM8iusooZ1gyE6oNfqd53U75cjp, 13 1ProTip9x3uoqKDJeMQJdQUCQawDLauNiF, 15 1Pw1r4ZiJnLc6th2trhnux5aeDsjVnaojg, 23 1PXHRQHG3Zy3y1JzU9X466nSPvYj9YjGiB, 23 1Q2TWHE3GMdB6BZKafqwxXtWAWgFt5Jvm3, 25 1QHjYiZZn5bJs9xNtr7GHMfnuc4weQJ1Tb, 17, 18 1QJm6hgf3er2PJ3U6LCNaH2dWdoD7wvS78, 18, 19 1rSiiksbK5ukazCzTyoZUaQANCX5cYXNs, 15 20fb69a94413637cb50f65e473f91d2599a04d5a0bf9bf6a5e9e843df2 710ea4, 9, 23 23512a72fddd90e7c0e74cfbe3d7cf8240a1785db967062fe5ed00ae93 eb0287, 8, 18 337RfngTLRTpU7RT9sKWQWDdmfcdmWnugi, 14 33s6B5emccJo8K5vEZcF6DnEqH5T2G7wRz, 22 348452539feadc38, 8 34A5AbusDYE1aEdigr39tP1LgZKMh2C5dQ, 22 35mwqShnStDro6uEB4bmsgbyBo8en6Byfm, 14 35wQL7iundJiKJZRCKQtab8bFi18Tnh3xo, 12 38Ww65vR3EoW2a1LUyYUzVvufZQyx3kGPZ, 22 39RichZ7KAMQnXkdfCTVzDsKm6cMyTFYZW, 22 39xsbuSvhjUaNSUnZi5o42gmM2gMTJtuGf, 14 3BBMnVk4GyeD9Z7TjeXDvsTnZhCrBAeosk, 29 3BiVpGAVDGSrY5PxoNr8gqLX7vUzjPaKnP, 22 3BwaQ4PmaiFyGzpEbhDErNRJRpkRNYqQyU, 21 3DSh6AnmvBpDJFUz2mnLirMLmTMcFs9nDm, 16 3f7b8ac6e15cd416e739400cf3bae34c97a8d9df153364ae2b6e4974ff 514621, 8, 20 3Fq28aWZf5SCF6VbhPZf9X33XPGS833mKS, 14 3KuLojun3mnY62zY2MZJt4fpLojwo9Ecxw, 21 3LoJ4pPq9RJUEToenZuC4AZXtbaiGjh4HE, 21 3Q7UkjMj67QMWhwFxLfUbaVwQivrAMowNX, 13 3QnsmojaZB4eW2AbKLAL3MRCbxch5WZm3t, 22 41955ccca5522135e14821efeea6b3f4642ca1af24fac8fe59bd0c3cc09 8ec0b, 8, 17 43962be4fb4bcdd4a20417b9221383228baee5c3db95293cfcc47f3e5 d7c00f7, 8, 18 46d5e8ce463e22bb, 8 48e6a3f79e93a460f4330d6553a7487768b8836fefb0caa90faf38e9e3a 14487, 29 496bc0ebc6f8d2d3, 8 5456aa645d3b0bbb, 6 591e91f809d716912ca1d4a9295e70c3e78bab077683f79350f101da6 4588073, 9, 24 595cf9da27359b36196ad457acba9a409ef68f51d6cd130e5449a4f418 fb62f1, 7, 14 5c85ed63469aa9971b5d01063dbb8bcdafd412b2f51a3d24abf2e310c 028bbf8, 28 5d607ae88c2caf1329e758ccb1eb8a359f6df434ee84e03b9e14cea300 a85f97, 9, 22

21


Sando Sasako 60b0512e878085d718328b8593b9aeeb50ae2313660359be4ad6b7a3 ae9ad6c3, 7, 17 62102bcef551308d081504342083ebf35d7f082738cc510c5cd94b3f7 ecb5e23, 12 63c9f255d218b88829582b08a32b84c41b2ba3eacdd38d7ecc8835836 85bdef9, 8, 20 67c35f9e5da6beab, 6, 12 687bdb971099ccf3, 9 6d27abe1a3bf39cc, 8 6f57d4621919f424a26b097d0f6ac17528c7d9c2519dad5df293af3ff9 4a6f6b, 7, 17 718460b9588d6199, 7 726b90d563778671, 8 75e993d5df3ecd3b, 7 76fc50a13d642965, 8 7b9d92b6098a1e5c11e948d9ac1dd18fb18087f6fd4864a4d0413a434 5bb8bc7, 12 7db51f4476def415, 7 828ef3b079f9c23829c56fe86e85b4a69d9e06e5b54ea597eef5fb3ffef 509fe, 6, 9, 23 85bd6e073db458fcc2a1b7f17d7c3ce2b80001f88c2bcd63e491f8488d 250dba, 9, 21 8d7af20a417457b9, 6 8dd5bd5f6226f15adc1c0d94afcac45c59314d606616ef805699ed7316 7502fc, 9, 22 8e8e4148332eefe195c51377d18a95f2c70972e829977d9752888ac1d d45e4ab, 6, 12 8e9a7cab05aee8f3, 7 91367b3361443bedc0b8f1dd45c6d9fb62ebc9c6b23858cffe155c14c0 80ea78, 7, 16 93a1c16f721c001190d8ee686efa80c534938d2ee8b49c98454365f56e cfa3fa, 8 94587f8b383d892e, 7 95dc05b85da05d76, 8 95e9be5bfbca6bdb, 7 989d63b398531c7a, 9 9e2ca7b6c0b6aba8, 7 a0437c485d409ca7, 7 a16f3ce4dd5deb92d98ef5cf8afeaf0775ebca408f708b2146c4fb42b41 e14be, 9, 24 a3b0e9e7cddbbe78270fa4182a7675ff00b92872d8df7d14265a2b1e37 9a9d33, 10 abb898accecb2d066ca772b9b79cdc2140cf2a6efe9e050b6e6eef2770 07f9f8, 8 ad38beebfb3f9ecc759787a69ada97c561a11e1a22355a052e5ab75077 4e5f8b, 6, 13 ae854dc75f814af2, 7 b01e861023ccf614, 9 b34bc834c790320e, 6 b6bd983868e1e3944b45dd644832ece3791f86c494c679ea2a8fcd884 f1b2769, 7, 14 ba60b4e0437562402caa17ffce31f6f62e4149986a17b8aa3bab044025 763ea9, 6, 13 bitcointalk.org, 1, 4, 6, 26, 30, 31 bitslog.wordpress.com, 4 Bitstamp.net, 9 blog.plan99.net, 31

22

c154aedf3df6f980def3aa25742ae4d176f32c74d43c297cd180e631a1 a26f8d, 8, 19 c3457c39c5978965, 9 c3dbb2a572403542, 9 c44e25bc65cef59f, 8 c4b968504a34a27482bf0f1f9d9b93b74fddbf3877cfd92e2fde48c6ba 8c791c, 7, 15 c4cbda5ea11c056dd08553c11be4c36b64bf458ad3cdad525d03ad9e0 295ad50, 8, 20 c7bd29267a338ff592209123b99e37bb8431f0b8511bd485d3d9a68c5 f0bb97a, 6, 12 cafeea4014228d575610eea291de6288c2125f9ec49a078bcb221c1c30 648caa, 7, 16 cb7eab441113a663, 9 cbec541a1a5f074d, 8 ccn.com, 29 cf41d32f398c6d78, 8 chortle.ccsu.edu, 5 d2c03b8a2c595674a842a8feced896a150d9dc592c91ff23aa90c82ecd 643c0e, 8 d798ffe94dad7d46, 8 d87ca44bedbba2107a0f8ef732a8ca3857db1754541e99970ce67da9e 29d19ee, 8, 21 dfabb8ce324b16d78f8aa5d66adcfdf823e64c366eb96e7620ad4f02af2 5dab2, 8, 20 e5684e9e288a31a2, 6 e73a45c936d2ce195f13b5a715614f7d10f94ff7a6593dc24fcf98bf173 941eb, 8, 21 e82f85e879cba004ff6ed485a4c90b30350aa900d39327e2e37868504a f74799, 7, 18 ea7124ece2a5312c, 9 eedbae6778bcf62f7ecd3eaa7bbabdcaf6992e9284ed2b3cc1c90f3a9fe ce711, 7, 19 f4184fc596403b9d638783cf57adfe4c75c605f6356fbc91338530e983 1e9e16, 9, 25 f5b204652306e30faa99600994482f6fc9df8ba12df3576d0833091eb8 270e64, 7, 15 fa1786d6d70bcbc9, 7 fc0bffe90fa4bb922c77ce3a9fc86742cb6bd38f57a7bf28c900c0470de 5137f, 7, 19 ff146cc4a0052739, 7 forbes.com, 1 geer.org, 2, 3, 26 imgur.com, 26, 27 letstalkbitcoin.com, 26, 28 metzdowd.com, 2, 26 mikehearn.wordpress.com, 31 nytimes.com, 31 reddit.com, 31 rsa.com, 2 sourceforge.net, 31 Unable to decode output address, 16 Unparsed address, 16 vacation.karoshi.com, 2 WalletExplorer.com, 9 web.archive.org, 31 Xapo.com, 7

bc1q9wmlgxha8wh7x750a9sysss9s07w2t0a0v67gc


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