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The First Bitcoin Post on Reddit Was Downvoted
16 years ago, a 16‑year‑old kid (username MisterLiberty) posted something on r/Libertarian that would change the world and nobody believed him.
In 2010. Bitcoin was trading for about 6 cents. Most people had never heard of it. Those who had called it a scam, a fad, or worse: a waste of electricity.
The teenager had been studying Satoshi Nakamoto’s white paper. He understood the math, the game theory, the vision. So he sat down and wrote a post that was, in hindsight, phenomenally clear:
“Imagine a digital commodity‑like currency that depends on no central authority or printing press… It’s called Bitcoin… Coins are generated by CPU power and become harder to generate as it reaches its finite limit of 21 million coins.”
He ended with a quiet prophecy: “This could be the next gold.”
The internet did what the internet does. Within hours, his post had 58 downvotes. The top comment? Some guy wrote:
“So you have to waste electricity to make money? I find the idea rather stupid.”
Another called it a “ponzi for nerds.” A few were curious, but most mocked him.
He was far too intelligent for his peers. A sixteen‑year‑old kid, sitting in his bedroom, saw the future. The grown adults on Reddit saw a toy.
The post sat there for years. Buried. Forgotten. Downvoted into obscurity.
Then Bitcoin started climbing. $1. $10. $100. $1,000. $10,000. $70,000.
That “stupid waste of electricity” became a trillion‑dollar asset. Governments started buying it. Pension funds too. The same people who laughed? They’re now paying $78,000 per coin.
And that 16‑year‑old? He didn’t delete his post. It’s still there... a time capsule of vision, patience, and a generation that wasn’t ready.
The top reply to his thread today would be very different.
But back then? They downvoted the future.