March 29, 2025
U.Today - Zak Cole, a blockchain protocol engineer and entrepreneur, has issued an X post to remind the crypto community, and especially Bitcoiners, about a major bug that hit Bitcoin 15 years ago, boosting its total supply to almost 200 billion BTC.
His message was that the community, which saved Bitcoin from that flaw, proved to be more important than the initial code hit by a bug.
Two of those wallets received 92.2 billion Bitcoins each. That happened a year and a half after the Bitcoin launch on Jan. 9, 2009. When it was noticed, within five hours, Satoshi Nakamoto and several other developers, including Jeff Garzik and Gavin Andresen, rolled out a new client version that contained a soft fork to prevent similar incidents in the future. At block 74691 all the nodes upgraded and the new chain overtook the old one.
“Bitcoin’s scarcity is not protected by code. It’s protected by people,” Cole stated. “The only reason Bitcoin didn’t die that day is because someone noticed. Bitcoin’s monetary policy was rescued, not by the protocol, but by the humans running it.”
This article was originally published on U.Today