James Howells is someone [[link]] we've reported on a few times in the past. Back in 2013, Howells had a significant collection of 7,500 stored on a hard drive. That collection ended up in the trash and subsequently taken to a local landfill. For over 10 years it's sat somewhere in the midst of that pile of waste—now Howells is taking his local authority to court to get it back.
Even at the time of the bitcoin's disposal it was worth a pretty penny—today it's worth around £500 million.
That's a sum of cash that would be undeniably difficult to just let go of. Though the promise of such a booty has also become a powerful tool in earning Howells help from various legal teams and data recovery engineers—reportedly working pro bono for a slice of the bitcoin millions.
James Goudie KC representing the authority suggests (via ): "Anything that goes into the landfill goes into the council’s ownership."
A single bitcoin is currently worth around £75,000 ($96,000). Back in 2013, .
The judge has not yet passed a judgement on whether this initial case will go [[link]] to a full trial—probably wise to weigh up the options.
Though you have to wonder what sort of state a hard drive would be in after 10 years being buried in a dump.
There's surely some argument to be made that, after a time, the trash becomes almost an insulating layer on itself. Layers of layers of trash protecting the bitcoin millions like layers of pasta sheets protecting a lasagna's meaty filling. Though you dread to think of the oozes and gunks in any city's landfill site. Even with the best recycling systems in the world (Wales is pretty good on the ol' recycling front) some perishable goods must've gotten through into that landfill over 10 years.
: The best speedy storage today.
: Compact M.2 drives.
: Huge capacities for less.
: Plug-in storage upgrades.
But doth a goo ruin a hard drive?
While generally seen as more susceptible to complete malfunction in a user's PC compared to a more modern solid state drive, that's largely because the HDD has a spinning platter with moving parts. A solid state drive is, you guessed it, solid. A HDD's spinning bits might break, but you don't need those to work to recover the data remaining on the drive.
The outer casing of a hard drive could be ruined, even the head damaged, and a professional might be able to do a good job of getting some of the stuff of it. Especially a drive that's not been actively wiped. It all depends on the type of hard drive it is, how many platters it uses, and if any or all of the platters [[link]] have been significantly damaged. Only the bits without damage can be recovered but that's still potentially a whole lot of usable data.
The good news is, a hard drive is a pretty robust design—a big metal box surrounding layers of platters that sort of protect one another—again, like a lasagna—so maybe Howells and his team of pro bono experts are in with a chance. Now to find and prove in law that he still owns it—does one own their trash once the binmen take it away?