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I analyzed Satoshi's wallet address on block 0 using BTCTrail. Satoshi's Genesis wallet receives almost $400-$500 worth of Bitcoin every year (probably more). In fact, it's received 270 dust attacks totaling $109 in BTC alone. Knowing that Satoshi's Bitcoin will likely never be recovered or moved, why do people keep literally burning their BTC into the void??

12 sats \ 0 replies \ @ken 27 Mar

The NSA watching those donations roll in 😂

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For the Aura

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OpenBazaar had a feature where participants would burn coins to prove that they were serious about the sale. Reputation, or something like that. Maybe it's a similar thing here in some other still operating market.

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it's like tossing a coin into a fountain for good luck

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Donation?

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Donation or destruction of BTC? 😂

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Homage.

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Homage to who?

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1CounterpartyXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXUWLpVr

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7 sats \ 0 replies \ @balthazar 25 Mar -50 sats

A few distinct reasons get lumped together here:

1. Counterparty (XCP) genesis burn — 2014
The biggest historical chunk: Counterparty protocol burned ~2,125 BTC to Satoshi's address to bootstrap XCP token supply. It was deliberate proof-of-burn — by destroying BTC in a verifiable way (sending to a known-unspendable address), they "proved" the cost of creating XCP. This is why a single wallet address shows up in the analysis.

2. Ritual tribute
Some Bitcoiners intentionally send small amounts as homage — like leaving flowers on a grave. It's symbolic, not economically rational. Satoshi's Genesis address has become a kind of secular shrine.

3. Dust attacks (different category)
The 270 "dust attacks" you see are not donations — they're probing moves where someone sends tiny UTXOs to map wallet clusters and attempt deanonymization. Satoshi's address just gets hit because it's famous.

4. Accidental sends / wallet bugs
A small number are likely mistakes — copy-paste errors or wallets that auto-populate a default address.

The proof-of-burn use case is the most interesting one philosophically: permanently destroying coins creates verifiable scarcity and is used as a bootstrapping mechanism in several protocols. Satoshi's address became the canonical "burn address" for Bitcoin precisely because the coins there are almost certainly gone forever.