In 2009, James Howells began mining Bitcoin as a hobby when it was just emerging and practically worthless. Over time, he managed to mine 8,000 Bitcoins, a substantial amount, though he didn't think much of it back then. Eventually, he stopped mining, set aside his hard drive, and forgot about it as Bitcoin’s value had little significance to him at the time.

Years later, in 2013, Howells was doing a cleanup and came across the old hard drive. Thinking it was just clutter, he mistakenly threw it in the trash without remembering it contained his Bitcoin wallet. Not long afterward, he realized his mistake and tried to locate the hard drive in Newport's landfill, but by then, the drive was lost under tons of garbage.

Bitcoin’s value skyrocketed after that, and those 8,000 Bitcoins would have been worth hundreds of millions of dollars. To this day, Howells has tried various ways to gain permission to dig up the landfill, offering the local council millions if they’d allow him to search. However, local authorities have consistently refused due to environmental and financial risks involved with excavation.

Howells' story is a harsh reminder of the volatility of digital currency, not just in price but in the risk of physical loss of access, given that there's no way to recover Bitcoins without the private keys. The thought of a fortune lying somewhere under layers of garbage has captivated many people, with some even attempting to search for their own lost drives, but to date, James Howells has never recovered his lost fortune.

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