
Mark Karpelès, the former CEO of defunct cryptocurrency exchange Mt. Gox, has published a formal proposal calling for a Bitcoin hard fork to recover approximately 79,956 BTC—valued at over $5.2 billion—from a long-dormant address linked to the exchange’s June 2011 security breach.
The proposal, which would require a coordinated network upgrade and carries the risk of a chain split, targets funds that remain outside the control of the Mt. Gox rehabilitation trustee and are not part of the ongoing creditor distribution process.
The proposal focuses on the Bitcoin address 1Feex…sb6uF, which received nearly 80,000 BTC following a documented compromise of Mt. Gox’s systems in June 2011. These coins have remained completely inactive for more than 15 years, suggesting the attacker may have lost access to the private keys or chosen not to move the funds.
Under current Bitcoin network rules, the funds can only be spent with the corresponding private key. The proposal seeks to override this requirement through a one-time consensus rule change.
The proposed mechanism would:
Add a consensus rule allowing the unspent outputs locked to the theft address to be spent using a signature from an official Mt. Gox recovery address
Return the recovered funds to Mt. Gox creditors through the existing court-supervised rehabilitation process in Japan
Apply only to this single, specifically identified address
Activate at a predetermined future block height if adopted by the network
Karpelès has framed the proposal as a starting point for community discussion rather than a formal implementation request. The draft documentation presents several justifications for the exceptional measure.
Key arguments in favor include:
The theft is “unambiguous” and well-documented in historical records of the Mt. Gox compromise
The coins have remained dormant for 15 years, indicating the attacker is unlikely to ever claim them
A court-supervised rehabilitation process already exists to distribute any recovered funds to verified creditors
The change is technically limited and narrow, representing a “one-time, hardcoded exception for a specific case with unique characteristics”
The proposal explicitly states that this would not establish a general mechanism for reversing transactions or recovering stolen funds, but rather address an exceptional circumstance where stolen assets have remained untouched for over a decade and a half.
The proposal acknowledges significant downsides and risks associated with implementing such a change to Bitcoin’s protocol.
Primary concerns identified include:
Immutability Precedent: Altering ownership rules for a specific address could undermine Bitcoin’s core principle of immutability, with critics arguing that “if it can be done once, it can be done again”
Selection Bias: The proposal raises the question of who decides which cases merit protocol intervention, as other major hacks could seek similar treatment
Chain Split Risk: Coordinating a hard fork carries the possibility of a network split if parts of the ecosystem refuse to adopt the change
Technical Coordination: Implementing the change would require broad consensus across miners, node operators, and other network participants
The draft explicitly states that these concerns represent “obvious downsides” that must be weighed against the potential recovery of creditor assets.
The 79,956 BTC targeted in this proposal are entirely separate from the assets currently being distributed to Mt. Gox creditors through the Japanese civil rehabilitation process.
Following Mt. Gox’s 2014 collapse, approximately 200,000 BTC were recovered and placed under the control of court-appointed trustee Nobuaki Kobayashi. Those holdings have formed the basis of creditor repayments that began in mid-2024.
Current status of Mt. Gox rehabilitation:
The trustee has extended the repayment deadline to October 2026, marking the third extension of the distribution timeline
According to on-chain data, the Mt. Gox estate still holds approximately 34,689 BTC across its identified wallets
Past movements from estate wallets, including a 10,608 BTC transfer in November 2025, have typically preceded creditor distributions
The coins at the 1Feex address remain outside the trustee’s control and have never been part of the assets available for distribution through the rehabilitation process.
If the Bitcoin community were to pursue this proposal, implementation would require a coordinated network upgrade.
Technical considerations outlined in the proposal include:
The rule change would need to be incorporated into a future Bitcoin Core software release
Activation would occur at a specific block height to give network participants time to upgrade
Nodes that do not adopt the change would remain on a chain that follows the existing consensus rules, potentially creating a permanent split
The change is designed to be self-contained and would not affect any other addresses or transactions on the network
The proposal emphasizes that this is not a formal request for implementation, but rather “an attempt to start a discussion about whether the Bitcoin community considers this specific, exceptional case worth addressing.”
The address 1Feex…sb6uF received approximately 80,000 BTC from the Mt. Gox exchange following a confirmed security breach in June 2011. These coins have not moved in over 15 years, making them one of the largest dormant holdings of stolen bitcoin from a single incident.
The proposal argues that this represents an exceptional case with unique characteristics: the theft is unambiguous, the funds have been dormant for 15 years, and a court-supervised process already exists to return any recovered assets to verified victims. The change would be a one-time, hardcoded exception rather than a general mechanism for reversing transactions.
The 80,000 BTC targeted by this proposal are completely separate from the assets currently being distributed by trustee Nobuaki Kobayashi. Those distribution funds were recovered after Mt. Gox’s 2014 collapse and have been part of the rehabilitation process, while the 1Feex address coins have never been under the trustee’s control.
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