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Mystery Bitcoin ‘Inscriptions’ Cost $64,000 to Create

Mystery Bitcoin 'Inscriptions' Cost $64,000 to Create

On January 6, a user embedded 8.93 MB of unformatted binary data into the Bitcoin blockchain as 332 Ordinals ‘inscriptions’.

The fees for creating these inscriptions ranged from $14 to $2500, totaling approximately $64,000.

On the Ord.io platform, the series of inscriptions is simply called ‘Nameless’. Two of them are marked with a pizza icon, indicating the use of satoshis from the 10,000 BTC that programmer Laszlo Hanyecz used to pay for two Papa John’s pepperoni pizzas in 2010.

The potential content of the information uploaded by the unknown party has sparked interest in the community.

“Some people are saying it may be encrypted, so potentially impossible/very hard to decrypt, FYI,” warned The Ordinal Show host known as Leonidas.

An attempt to use ChatGPT to decode the data was unsuccessful. The AI halted the process, stating it would take too long.

The creator of the meme token Cheems turned the situation into a joke. He claimed his team managed to decrypt the information and would post data on all 332 inscriptions in a series of tweets. The first fragment supposedly contained data on human behavior research, potentially a state secret, while another file allegedly mentioned extraterrestrial contacts. However, the thread soon devolved into a well-known internet meme featuring Rick Astley.

Earlier, on January 5, an unknown user sent 26.91 BTC (~$1.2 million) to the wallet of Bitcoin’s creator, Satoshi Nakamoto.

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