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		Billion dollar pizza? Bitcoin soars on key anniversary of crypto's 
		growth
		[May 23, 2025]  By 
		ALAN SUDERMAN 
		It’s not an official holiday – yet – but for many cryptocurrency 
		enthusiasts “Bitcoin Pizza Day” is still special. Thursday marks the 
		15th anniversary of the first known use of cryptocurrency to buy 
		real-world goods.
 The 10,000 bitcoin that software developer Laszlo Hanyecz paid for two 
		Papa John’s pizzas delivered to his Florida home on May 22, 2010, were 
		worth about $41 at the time. Today they’re worth $1.1 billion, as 
		bitcoin hits record high prices.
 
 Several cryptocurrency companies are announcing promotions and other 
		celebrations to mark Bitcoin Pizza Day. Bitget, a cryptocurrency 
		exchange, announced that it’s giving away pizzas to more than 2,000 
		people at gatherings held around the world.
 
 Here’s the backstory of Bitcoin Pizza Day:
 
 Humble Beginnings
 
 The first bitcoin was created in early 2009 by the digital currency’s 
		still unknown creator, Satoshi Nakamoto. It started as a passion project 
		for libertarian-minded computer nerds who wanted to create a digital 
		payment system that didn’t rely on a third party – like a government or 
		financial institution – for transactions.
 
 Hanyecz was an early enthusiast and became active on an early bitcoin 
		internet message board, offering technical advice on how to “mine” 
		bitcoin more effectively.
 
 Central to bitcoin’s technology is the process through which 
		transactions are verified and then recorded on what’s known as the 
		blockchain. Computers connected to the bitcoin network race to solve 
		complex mathematical calculations that verify the transactions, with the 
		winner earning newly minted bitcoins as a reward in a process known as 
		mining.
 
		
		 
		In the early days, enthusiasts could mine bitcoin through their home 
		computers and Hanyecz accumulated thousands of the new digital asset. 
		Nowadays, mining bitcoin has become a highly competitive field with 
		multi-billion-dollar companies using specialized computers in entire 
		data centers to acquire new bitcoins.
 ‘No weird fish topping’
 
 In the early days, no one quite knew what to do with the bitcoin they 
		were mining. On May 18, 2010, Hanyecz tried an experiment and posted a 
		message offering 10,000 bitcoins for pizza.
 
 “I like things like onions, peppers, sausage, mushrooms, tomatoes, 
		pepperoni, etc.. just standard stuff no weird fish topping or anything 
		like that,” Hanyecz wrote.
 
 Three days later, Hanyecz wondered if he needed to up the price.
 
 “So nobody wants to buy me pizza? Is the bitcoin amount I’m offering too 
		low?” he wrote.
 
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             A neon sign that alerts customers that the business accepts 
			bitcoin as payment, hangs in the window of Healthy Harvest Indoor 
			Gardening in Hillsboro, Ore., on Feb. 7, 2018. (AP Photo/Gillian 
			Flaccus, File) 
            
			
			
			 But the next day, Hanyecz said he’d 
			successfully traded his bitcoin for pizza. Another bitcoin 
			enthusiast from California had paid for the Papa John’s pizza in 
			exchange for the cryptocurrency, according to a book about bitcoin's 
			early history, “Digital Gold.” “A great milestone reached,” said another early 
			bitcoin enthusiast on the message board congratulating Hanyecz.
 Tremendous growth
 
 It did not take long for bitcoin to take off after the first pizza 
			deal. Bitcoin started getting more publicity and grew, thanks in 
			part to the popularity of an online black-market site, Silk Road, 
			which only accepted bitcoin.
 
 By February 2014, with bitcoin trading at around $600, Hanyecz 
			marveled at what the digital currency had become.
 
 “I mean people can say I’m stupid, but it was a great deal at the 
			time,” Hanyecz wrote on the bitcoin message board. “I don’t think 
			anyone could have known it would take off like this.”
 
 Five years later, when bitcoin was trading as high as $11,000, 
			Hanyecz reflected on what buying that first pizza meant for bitcoin.
 
 “It made it real for some people, I mean it certainly did for me,” 
			Hanyecz said on the television show “60 minutes.”
 
 Hanyecz has largely stayed out of the public spotlight in recent 
			years and efforts to contact him by The Associated Press were 
			unsuccessful.
 
 All-time highs
 
 After many years of fits and starts, bitcoin now appears firmly 
			entrenched in the mainstream financial system. While it hasn’t taken 
			off as a way to pay for everyday items like pizza, bitcoin has found 
			popularity as a kind of “digital gold,” or a way to store value.
 
 Retirement accounts can buy bitcoin ETFs, more and more companies 
			buy bitcoin as corporate treasuries, and President Donald Trump 
			recently signed an executive order establishing a government reserve 
			of bitcoin.
 
 Bitcoin was trading at about $111,000 on Thursday morning — a new 
			record. That price gives it a market cap of more than $2 trillion, 
			or about the same as Amazon.
 
			
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