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Approximately 15 million people monitor whales each year. Many are located in places such as Mozambique, Costa Rica, and Sri Lanka.
Stuck in Icelandtravel magazines are labelled “whales watching demanding contact sports to fight elements while looking for creatures that don’t care about anything, whether you’re watching or not.
“Sometimes you’re lucky, and whales take a long time when visible. Sometimes they move fast, pop up here and there, and have to watch right away.”
Today’s post celebrates the sports version of Bitcoin. Grab your spray jacket and binoculars and play the code catamaran.
She blows tar!
As Bitcoin had last crossed over $100, the earliest known efforts to find, track and identify Bitcoin Zilla occurred in August 2013.
Prominent Bitcointalk user Prophetx proposed three whale hunting commandments and encouraged others to join.
- Please post addresses that exceed 5,000 btc ($500,000, $522 million) in the last 90 days.
- Work together to identify the owner of your address, either in the real world or through an online footprint.
- Use that information to map the biggest whales of the Bitcoin economy and follow the movement of the coin.
“Why?” It was the first response.
“I am studying economics, so it is important to me to observe and study the spending of capitalist groups,” the Prophet said.
“It looks a bit creepy and sturdy…” replied another.
Prophetx: “This is no different from the richest list of Forbes. Bitcoin needs to enable this and use it to advance your knowledge.
However, there were also other whale hunters who joined in. Within two days, someone created an extensive list of around 300 addresses, including more Bitcoin than anyone else, and was discovered in 50,000 block increments (every 350 days).

In the future, Bitcoin will be worth over $500.
Among those whales were addresses starting with 31,000 BTC “12IB7…”. Priced in 2013 $3.1 million, $3.2 Billion today. This is the 967th address created so far and was first funded in May 2010.
This address is still on Bitcoin’s rich list, currently ranked 28th, and is closely dragged behind the Binance Mining Pool and Cold Wallet.
The Prophetx thread never exceeded that, and no whales were identified under the actual post. Years later, as part of a melancholy long Clyman Real Estate Court lawsuit, Craig Wright will falsely assert the ownership of the address along with others via the Tulip Trust.
Wright claimed that the hacker stole the private key and the backup was deleted. He also sued the Bitcoin developer to allow the coin to be managed in some way.
Of course, Wright eventually lost the Kleiman case, and was ordered to pay $100 million for the property, and soon afterwards filed a lawsuit against the Bitcoin developer.
So who owns the 12ib7? No one knows. The last outgoing transaction of 12IB7 was in July 2010, directing 9,000 BTC to an unidentified address (the first outgoing transaction was also this day in 2010!)
Many Juicy: Coinbase Director Connor Grogan has reached as long as it could link the address to Satoshi.