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Seventeen years have passed since Hal Finney posted that first message about Bitcoin on a public forum, and honestly, the more time goes by, the more this story seems deeper than it appears at first glance.
For those who don’t know, Finney was a software engineer and cypherpunk who, on January 11, 2009, posted what would become the first known mention of Bitcoin outside of Satoshi Nakamoto’s circle. At that time, there was no price, no exchange, nothing but a handful of cryptographers testing a crazy idea. But Finney was one of those rare people who truly believed that this could lead to something meaningful.
He downloaded the software immediately, mined the first blocks, received the first Bitcoin transaction. These details became part of Bitcoin’s foundation, you know? But the most interesting part came later, when Finney decided to tell his own story years afterward.
What caught my attention was how Bitcoin’s technical trajectory ended up paralleling a very intense personal struggle. After Finney saw Bitcoin really gain value, he moved the coins to cold storage with the intention of leaving them to his children. But shortly after, he was diagnosed with ALS, a degenerative neurological disease that gradually left him paralyzed. As his physical abilities declined, he kept coding using eye-tracking and assistive technologies. The dedication is impressive, but it also reveals something Bitcoin still hasn’t fully solved.
You see, Bitcoin was created to remove trust from centralized financial systems. But Hal Finney’s experience exposes a fundamental tension: a currency without intermediaries still depends on human continuity. Private keys don’t age, but people do. Bitcoin doesn’t recognize illness, death, or inheritance—unless all of that is managed outside the blockchain.
The solution Finney found was cold storage and trusting family members. It’s the same approach many long-term holders use today, even with the rise of ETFs, institutional custody, and regulated vehicles. But as Bitcoin matured from an experiment into a global asset held by banks, funds, and governments, these issues Finney faced remain quietly central.
How do you pass Bitcoin between generations? Who controls access when the original holder can no longer do so? And more fundamentally: does Bitcoin in its purest form truly serve humans throughout a lifetime?
The contrast between the Bitcoin Finney knew and today’s Bitcoin is striking. He got involved when it was fragile, experimental, driven by ideology. Today, it’s traded as macroeconomic infrastructure. Spot ETFs, custody platforms, regulatory milestones define how most capital interacts with the asset. These structures often trade sovereignty for convenience. Is the promise of individual control over Bitcoin being preserved or diluted? Finney understood both sides of that question.
He believed in its long-term potential but also recognized how much his own participation depended on circumstances, timing, and luck. He lived through Bitcoin’s first major crash and learned to emotionally detach from price volatility—a mindset that almost every hodler adopted afterward.
Finney never described his life as heroic or tragic. He saw himself as lucky to be there at the beginning, to have contributed significantly, and to have left something for his family. Seventeen years after that initial perspective, it seems increasingly relevant. Bitcoin proved it can survive markets, regulation, and political pressure. What it still hasn’t fully resolved is how a system created to outlast institutions adapts to the finite nature of its users.
Hal Finney’s legacy is no longer just about being a pioneer. It’s about illuminating the human questions Bitcoin needs to answer as it transitions from pure code to inheritance, from experiment to permanent financial infrastructure. This is the kind of thing that should make us think differently about what Bitcoin really means to us today.