A decade-long struggle to recover a locked Bitcoin (BTC) fortune has ended in success after a crypto owner used Artificial Intelligence to bypass a password he forgot while under the influence in college.
Casper Kirschner, who shared the details of his recovery on social media, successfully unlocked 5.25 BTC valued at approximately $420,000 at current market prices after eleven years of failed attempts.
The recovery marks a rare victory in the world of "lost" crypto, where billions of dollars remain inaccessible due to forgotten credentials.
The 11 Year Mistake
The story began in 2015 when Kirschner, then a college student, decided to change the password on his digital wallet. According to Kirschner, he was "high" at the time and immediately forgot the new credentials he had created.
For over a decade, the 5.25 BTC sat untouched as Bitcoin’s value skyrocketed from a few hundred dollars to record highs. Kirschner exhausted nearly every traditional method to regain access, including hiring professional recovery services and attempting to "brute force" the wallet.
He estimated that he had run 7 trillion different password combinations over the years without success.
How The Recovery Happened
The breakthrough came when Kirschner turned to Claude, an AI model developed by Anthropic. Instead of asking the AI to guess the password, he provided it with unstructured data and local files from his old computer.
Also Read: Ethereum Holds Near $2,244 While Search Interest Starts To Climb The AI performed a forensic-style analysis of the legacy files. During this process, it identified a logical flaw in the way Kirschner was approaching the recovery. By correlating old files and scripts, the AI helped him locate an older version of the wallet file that predated the forgotten password.
This allowed him to bypass the 2015 "college mistake" entirely and move the funds to a new, secure address.
The Broader 'Lost Crypto' Problem
Kirschner’s success is a statistical outlier in an industry plagued by permanent data loss. According to data from the blockchain analysis firm Chainalysis, roughly 20% of all existing Bitcoin, worth billions of dollars, is estimated to be lost or stuck in wallets that cannot be accessed by their owners.
While most "lost" stories end with users accidentally throwing away hard drives or losing paper keys, Kirschner’s case highlights how generative AI is beginning to play a role in digital forensics and legacy data recovery.
Following the recovery, Kirschner confirmed he fulfilled a promise to pay a 5% "finder's fee" to a contact who encouraged him to try the AI-led approach.
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