Posted on 05/13/2026 8:22:55 PM PDT by Red Badger
A viral X post claims Anthropic’s Claude AI helped recover 5 Bitcoin worth nearly $400,000 after more than a decade of failed attempts.

A pile of cryptocurrencies. Unsplash
An X user says an AI chatbot helped recover nearly $400,000 worth of forgotten Bitcoin from an old college-era wallet, turning a decade-long crypto nightmare into one of the internet’s strangest comeback stories this week.
The user, who goes by “Cprkrn” on X, claimed they regained access to 5 Bitcoin that had been locked away for more than 11 years. The coins were reportedly bought when Bitcoin traded near $250. Today, that stash would be worth roughly $398,000. The post quickly spread through crypto circles after the user credited Anthropic’s Claude AI assistant for helping uncover the missing piece.
Years of failed attempts According to the thread, the wallet dated back to the user’s college years. They reportedly lost access after changing the password while intoxicated and later forgetting the updated credentials. The user said they spent years trying to recover access through brute-force software and massive password combination searches. None of those attempts worked.

@cprkrn’s viral post on X. Credit – X
The breakthrough reportedly came after they uploaded files from an old college computer into Claude. That shifted the recovery effort away from password guessing and toward analyzing old recovery data, forgotten backups, and wallet versions stored across the device.
AI finds hidden clue
Instead of cracking Bitcoin encryption, Claude reportedly helped sort through old wallet files and recovery information. During the search, the AI identified an older wallet.dat file that appeared to exist before the password change happened.
The user also had access to an old mnemonic recovery phrase. That combination reportedly allowed the wallet to open without bypassing any security protections. In the viral post, Cprkrn celebrated the recovery and thanked Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei, joking that the experience had been life-changing.
The story sparked debate online because many social media users initially framed the recovery as an AI “hack.” Crypto users quickly pushed back on that claim. Claude did not break Bitcoin security or decrypt protected data. Instead, it reportedly acted more like a research assistant that helped organize years of forgotten files and point toward the correct wallet version.
Old hard drives, new fortunes
The incident highlights a growing reality inside crypto: forgotten wallets from Bitcoin’s early years now hold enormous value. Recovery tools like BTCRecover already help users test password variations and recover damaged wallet access. Still, many recovery attempts require technical expertise that average users often lack.
That is where AI tools could become increasingly useful. Instead of manually sorting through folders, timestamps, and backup files, users can ask AI systems to identify patterns and narrow the search. Millions of Bitcoin are believed to remain inaccessible because owners lost passwords, hard drives, or recovery phrases during crypto’s early years.
With Bitcoin prices staying elevated, even forgotten laptops sitting in closets could now hold small fortunes. For crypto holders, the story offers a simple reminder: back up wallet data carefully, store recovery phrases securely, and never rely on memory alone.
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Ping!.................
Another reason for folks to stop drinking. However, such will be disregarded by many.

I forgot
At least the 11 year old Wallet was not empty from others mining bitcoin.
How would the new password be in that file?
> How would the new password be in that file?
Picky, picky, picky. Don't focus on the details. Go with the "vibe". /s
I started using a password manager about 10 years ago (KeePass), and switched to a paid Keeper account about a year ago after great experience with my company's enterprise/gov Keeper.
“This is what I use:”
***********************
I use yellow sticky notes stuck next to my display monitor. /sarc?
Fortune and $400k don’t really belong in the same sentence, do they?
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