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Tech Consumer Journal > News > Why Would Someone Publicly Burn $8 Million Worth of Bitcoin? Theories Are Flying
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Why Would Someone Publicly Burn $8 Million Worth of Bitcoin? Theories Are Flying

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Last updated: May 29, 2026 1:45 am
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Earlier this week, someone burned 107 bitcoin (currently worth roughly $7.8 million) by sending the coins to an address where they would become provably unspendable. Initially, the public lighting of digital money on fire caused more confusion than anything else, but now a few theories are emerging as to what may have happened here.

The Bitcoin blockchain shows that on Monday, five separate addresses sent a combined 107 bitcoin across five transactions that landed in the same block. The transactions all directed funds to the address 1111111111111111111114oLvT2. Those source addresses have been dormant since April 2014, and the inclusion of all of the transactions in the same block indicates that they were likely generated by the same entity. After the transfers, the source wallets held zero balance, and the burn address balance jumped from roughly 700 bitcoin to more than 807 bitcoin. This particular burn address has served as one of Bitcoin’s best-known burn destinations since 2010 and has received more than 385,000 outputs and spent none.

🚨🚨🚨 Someone just broadcasted 5 transactions totaling 107 BTC to the Bitcoin “burn address” 1111111111111111111114oLvT2
😢😢 https://t.co/O8qeGjrzG9 pic.twitter.com/oQplxtQgSd

— Sani | TimechainIndex.com (@SaniExp) May 26, 2026

Burn addresses look like normal Bitcoin wallet addresses on the surface, but they are deliberately constructed or designated so that spending from them is considered computationally or provably impossible. Once bitcoin is sent there, recovering the funds would require breaking the underlying cryptographic assumptions or finding an extraordinarily improbable collision, making the coins effectively unspendable.

In the past, projects have deliberately used similar kinds of addresses for proof-of-burn mechanisms. For example, Counterparty, which is a Bitcoin metaprotocol that launched in 2014, relied on a different burn address (1CounterpartyXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXUWLpVr) to issue its XCP tokens by destroying bitcoin in exchange for new tokens. Bitcoin itself contains no dedicated “burn” opcode, so users have long relied on these unspendable addresses to intentionally remove coins from circulation. Thousands of bitcoin have been destroyed this way over the network’s history.

While burn transactions remain fully visible on the public ledger, the associated addresses carry no linked real-world identities on the blockchain. Additionally, no individual or organization has stepped forward to explain the recent burn of 107 bitcoin or perform any sort of publicity stunt. Notably, Coinbase deliberately burned a non-fungible token (NFT) it had acquired for $25 million and publicly announced the destruction as part of the marketing around a corporate deal last year.

That said, there has been plenty of speculation as to what could have happened here. Some observers joked that the sender had performed an unintended service for every other bitcoin holder by permanently shrinking the circulating supply and, in theory, supporting the asset’s scarcity. Strategy executive chair Michael Saylor has previously stated that he plans to burn his personal bitcoin holdings upon his death as a gift to other holders, describing the act as a form of “economic immortality” that would increase the value of the remaining coins.

One user on X suggested the transfers may have resulted from a botched wallet recovery or inheritance process in which the sender copied a demonstration address from a tutorial without replacing it with the intended destination. Another pointed to the large number of unspent transaction outputs (UTXOs) accumulated at the burn address over more than a decade as a sign that the error could involve faulty change-address generation logic in wallet software.

Crypto firm Galaxy Research examined the incident in an unofficial review and published its leading theories on X. They noted that tax-loss harvesting seemed unlikely because the coins dated from 2014 and would represent long-term capital gains rather than losses. Other possibilities included religious motivations tied to vows of poverty observed by certain orders, destruction of proceeds from illicit activity to avoid compliance risks, coercion under threat, or even an initiation ritual. The most plausible explanation in their view involved an AI-driven or agentic trading system that mistakenly routed funds to a “Counterparty” reference, interpreting it as a burn address (as was used in the aforementioned Counterparty proof-of-burn process) instead of the actual recipient.

Simon Dixon, an early investor in multiple bitcoin-related companies, including Kraken, raised the possibility that the transfers related to Kraken’s planned initial public offering. He observed that the dormant wallets trace back to funds from the 2013-2014 Mt. Gox era, some of which Kraken had helped distribute during the bankruptcy proceedings, and suggested the burn could form part of broader housekeeping ahead of regulatory scrutiny and institutional due diligence.

Unless the sender or an involved party comes forward with an explanation, the precise reason behind the move will likely remain unknown. Even a sufficiently powerful quantum computer would be unable to recover these specific funds, although there is still potentially billions of dollars worth of bitcoin treasure to be found by a theoretical quantum computer in other vulnerable addresses.



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