I noticed something quite intriguing that is resurfacing in crypto news. The former Mt. Gox official, Mark Karpelès, has just proposed a solution to recover approximately 80,000 bitcoins that have been locked for over 15 years following the 2011 attack. For context, with the current BTC price around $76,870, these assets would be worth over $6 billion.



The proposal is quite radical: a hard fork of Bitcoin to change the consensus rules. The idea would be to allow control of this frozen wallet address since the Gox hack, so that the funds can be included in the creditor reimbursement program currently under judicial supervision.

What really intrigues me is the technical and political complexity of this approach. Karpelès himself acknowledges that it would require massive coordination across the entire network and that some community members might refuse to support this change. The risk of a blockchain split is clearly mentioned. He also notes that this is just a starting point for discussion, with the intention to limit changes to a single address and activate them at a future block height.

What makes things even more complicated: these 80,000 BTC are not currently part of the assets allocated to Gox creditors and are not under the control of the bankruptcy trustee. So it’s a real dilemma. On one hand, there’s an opportunity to recover massive funds for Gox victims. On the other, changing Bitcoin’s rules for a single address sets a worrying precedent and goes against the immutable philosophy of the blockchain.

I think this proposal will generate quite a bit of debate in the coming months. The issue is not only technical but also philosophical for the Bitcoin ecosystem.
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