I Lost Two Bitcoins Years Before it Hit $100K
So why am I still smiling? Plus how to think about crypto with Trump & Musk in charge
Above: AI’s terrible attempts to illustrate my relationship with Bitcoin and to understand my hair · Sree’s newsletter is produced with Zach Peterson (@zachprague). Digimentors Tech Tip from Robert S. Anthony (@newyorkbob). · Our sponsorship kit.
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IN 2011, I WAS GIFTED TWO BITCOINS when they were worth two Big Macs each. I promptly forgot about them and eventually lost access to the digital wallet they were in. Now, at $100K each, they are the price of five Teslas.
Everyone who has heard this story has become upset for me — and with me. “How could you?” is a common question. Usually implying how could I be so stupid?
But I’m not upset. And not just because I wouldn’t buy one Tesla, let alone five.
Don’t get me wrong. I’d love to have an extra $200K right now, or $20K, but I’m not upset because:
I know I would have sold when Bitcoin hit $10 or $100 or, surely, $1,000. Anyone who tells you in my place they would have held onto their two Bitcoins past $10K or $30K or $50K or whatever is fooling themselves.
It’s money I didn’t earn at all. Call me old-fashioned, but I think money is something you earn through hard work or smart investments, etc, not by gambling.
This milestone of $100K means millions of people are now paying more attention to Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, and with Trump being hailed as “the first crypto president,” get ready for nonstop coverage of crypto and fortunes made and lost (more of the latter than the former).
Crypto isn’t mainstream yet. If you’re terminally online, it’s easy to think that cryptocurrency is a major financial asset class that is taking the world by storm (the global crypto market is worth about $3 trillion, around 1% of the total financial market of $255 trillion).
Crypto markets are so volatile and risky that they naturally exclude most would-be investors. Larger, more established financial firms have some sort of crypto holdings, but the entire asset class represents a statistically insignificant share of financial markets overall—and most of that is Bitcoin, the one shining example amid a sea of shitcoins and/or memecoins, ponzi schemes, and pump-and-dump scams that cost people, in some cases, everything.
That’s the thing—it’s all speculative. The entire crypto industry is speculative. The real-world use case of paying for groceries is difficult and painfully long at present, and the complexity of the system actually relies on that complexity for legitimacy. It’s at odds with itself.
I really like this piece from Annie Lowrey in The Atlantic last year when the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission charged the crypto firm Binance with a dozen or so major financial crimes. A couple of passages from the piece that stood out to me:
On volatility:
Then there are the volatility and the bubbles. Financial assets go up in price. They go down in price. This is their nature. But few things go up and down quite like crypto. NFTs came out of nowhere, sucked up billions of dollars, and collapsed. Initial coin offerings came out of nowhere, sucked up billions of dollars, and disappeared.
Wealthy investors might be able to tolerate these kinds of losses. High-risk investors might be able to tolerate this kind of volatility. So too might crypto true believers, for whom HODL, or “Hold on for dear life,” is a common refrain. But most people don’t want to hold on for dear life.
This gets to what’s most interesting to me about crypto—if the major players would simply play ball and submit their assets and products to the same regulatory scrutiny that the rest of the global financial system generally adheres to, it would probably lead to more trust, more innovation, and real adoption of the technology. As it stands now, the vibes are off and the industry is represented publicly by nihilist crypto bros who can stand to lose a few million dollars here and there for the lolz if nothing else.
In October, Pew Research Center published new survey data on Americans’ views of crypto, and the industry has severe trust and image issues:
Roughly six-in-ten Americans (63%) say they have little to no confidence that current ways to invest in, trade or use cryptocurrencies are reliable and safe. This includes three-in-ten adults who say they are not at all confident, and a third who say they are not very confident.
Just 5% of adults are extremely or very confident in cryptocurrencies, and 18% are somewhat confident.
These numbers have really not changed in the last 18 months.
I am not, however, here to pour cold water on crypto as a whole. Web3 (described by Wikipedia as “an idea for a new iteration of the World Wide Web which incorporates concepts such as decentralization, blockchain technologies, and token-based economics”) is interesting, and I think there is a future where the technology has real-world applications beyond being a lottery for people who just want to buy another boat.
For an easily accessible description of crypto’s shortcomings, I highly recommend this speech by Fabio Panetta, member of the Executive Board of the European Central Bank, from June 2023. It’s plain-spoken and a fantastic overview.
For a slightly more scathing view, “Why Crypto Just Won’t Die,” by Gilad Edelman for The Atlantic, is pretty good too.
Finally, with the news that David Sacks will be Trump’s “AI and crypto czar”—more on Saks on my roundup of three deplorables with South African connections who have Trump’s ear—and the crypto bro universe flocking to Trump, read Ellen Ioanes and Nicole Narea on Vox for a good rundown on what it all means for us.
I asked a worldly-wise friend about his thoughts on Bitcoin and here’s what he wrote:
I never bought any Bitcoin or crypto — my logic was the US would not give up the US dollar, Great Britain would defend the pound, and India would hang on to the rupee — so Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies would forever be relegated to the fringe, the province of drug dealers and speculators and Ayn Rand types. Now with a US president so big into crypto it’s going to be different.
Please be careful out there, and don’t lose the keys to your crypto wallets! Like so many other things crypto, it could really cost you.
NOTE: One of the best ways to understand crypto and the decentralized web is to read Decrypt.co, a news site founded and run by my friend Josh Quittner, a pioneering tech journalist who helped millions of us understand the early web. Each writer discloses how much crypto they own (Josh “owns less than 1 BTC and less than 3 ETH”) and Decrypt has a manifesto worth reading.
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💵 Last week, I made the case for the funding of new media outlets. Am working on some ideas and looking for collaborators and partners. Ping me: sree.sreenivasan1@gmail.com.
DIGIMENTORS TECH TIP | Refurbished Tech Bargains: Going Once, Going Twice…
By Robert S. Anthony
Each week, veteran tech journalist Bob Anthony shares a tech tip you don’t want to miss. Follow him @newyorkbob on Twitter and check out his 1.1 million followers on Pinterest!
My father used to tell a story about how a refurbished car tire he once bought unraveled on the road shortly afterward. His advice: Don't buy refurbished goods—a bargain isn’t always a real bargain.
That advice, while sage, doesn’t always hold up for refurbished tech devices, many of which work just as well as their brand-new siblings, come with warranties and can be had for much lower prices.
The word seems to have gotten out this holiday shopping season, however, so if you’re shopping for a refurbished gizmo for yourself, look now and look often. Since many stores define “refurbished” differently, it’s a good idea to start hunting at the source: the manufacturers’ websites.
Earlier this year the Google Store’s refurbished-items section was empty, save for a generic watch-this-space message. Now, it’s flush with Pixel Android smartphones ranging from the 2022-vintage Pixel 6a with a 6.1-inch display and 128 GB of storage (original price $449; refurbished $249) to the Pixel 7 Pro with a 6.7-inch display and 512 GB of storage ($1,099 when launched in 2023; refurbished $779).
According to the Google Store, each refurbished Pixel phone “is handled with care and comes with a one-year Google warranty.” Also included are standard in-box accessories, like a USB-C cable, a male USB-C to female USB-A Quick Switch adapter and a SIM insertion tool.
None of the refurbished Pixels will be “obsolete” any time soon. Google recently extended the number of years of Android updates for Pixel 6- and 7-series smartphones to “5 years starting from when the device first became available on the Google Store in the US.”
Microsoft’s Surface Pro 2-in-1 tablet/computers are popular travel Windows PCs thanks to their balance of low weight and ample processing power. The current Surface Pro 11th Edition Copilot+ PCs are “designed for advanced AI experiences,” according to Microsoft, and are powered by Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X Elite or Plus processors, not Intel’s Core processors like older units.
While Snapdragon X processors flawlessly run almost all Windows apps, there are some, including some Adobe products, that may slow down because they have to go through a “translation layer” or not run at all. This seems to have led to a brisk market for refurbished Intel-based Surface Pro units, which don’t have these compatibility issues and come with a 12-month warranty.
For example, a refurbished 2022 platinum-colored Microsoft Surface Pro 9 with a 12th-generation Intel Core i5 processor, 8GB of RAM and a 256GB solid state drive (SSD) is listed for $704.25, an admirable discount from its original 2022 price of $1,099—but it’s out of stock.
Of the 11 configurations of refurbished platinum Surface Pro 9s listed, only three, all with more powerful Intel Core i7 processors, more RAM and in most cases more storage, were available and all were priced above $1,000. Note that Surface Pro pricing doesn’t include a keyboard.
Amazon’s Fire tablets have proven reliable over the years even though they run a version of Android that can’t access Google’s Play store, just Amazon’s app store. Amazon’s listing of refurbished Fire tablets was especially bare recently with refurbished 2019-version Fire 7 tablets with 32GB of storage ($59.99) and 2019 Fire HD 10 tablets with 64GB of storage ($159.99) shown with the same caveat: “Only 1 left in stock - order soon.”
However, neither is a good deal. The 2022 (current) version of the Fire 7 with 32GB of storage is now on sale for $44.99 and the 2023 Fire HD 10 with a 64GB SSD is on sale for $89.99.
The moral: Shop carefully and click slowly.
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— Sree | Twitter | Bluesky | IG | LinkedIn | FB | YouTube / Threads | Spread | TikTok
💵 Last week, I made the case for the funding of new media outlets. Am working on some ideas and looking for collaborators and partners. Ping me: sree.sreenivasan1@gmail.com.
I’m in a similar situation and appreciate your views on why you’re not upset….
Thank you Sree. My daughter bought a Bitcoin when she was in college for $30. She lost the piece of paper on which she'd written the key code. Gone forever! But, like you, she would have cashed out much earlier.
As for what's up with Trump, Musk and crypto, I found this by Chris Hayes helpful, alarming and not surprising given the mafia cum oligarch team taking charge of the United States shortly: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qWANiC28M8o