Most people in crypto think they’ve seen a lot. They haven’t…Not really. I was here when Bitcoin was a joke. When “blockchain” wasn’t a buzzword, it was a punchMost people in crypto think they’ve seen a lot. They haven’t…Not really. I was here when Bitcoin was a joke. When “blockchain” wasn’t a buzzword, it was a punch

I’ve Been in Bitcoin Since 2014. Here’s What Nobody Tells You.

2026/03/18 21:39
10 min read
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Most people in crypto think they’ve seen a lot. They haven’t…Not really.

I was here when Bitcoin was a joke. When “blockchain” wasn’t a buzzword, it was a punchline. When AI meant a chess bot and Web3 didn’t exist as a concept yet. I watched this entire world get built, collapse, get rebuilt, collapse again and then quietly become the infrastructure of the future while everyone was busy arguing on Twitter.

This isn’t a timeline. Timelines are boring and you can Google one. This is the stuff I actually remember. The moments that changed everything. The patterns nobody talks about and where I think we’re all going next, including how to make money from it.

The Moment Everything Broke And Why It Mattered

n early 2014, the world’s largest Bitcoin exchange, Mt. Gox collapsed, gone. 850,000 Bitcoin, roughly $450 million at the time, vanished overnight and people lost everything.

Here’s what I remember most about that moment: the mainstream world said “told you so.” They were certain that was it. For them Bitcoin was dead, finished, a scam from the start.

They were wrong. But here’s the part nobody tells you, that collapse was the best thing that ever happened to Bitcoin. It burned the weak hands. It exposed that centralised custodians holding your keys were a catastrophic design flaw. It forced the entire ecosystem to grow up. The lesson? Not your keys, not your coins. That lesson is still the most important thing in this space. Every disaster since, every rug, every exchange collapse, every FTX, traces back to someone ignoring it.

Ethereum Changed the Question

For years, the only question in crypto was: is Bitcoin real money?

Then in 2015, a 21-year-old named Vitalik Buterin launched Ethereum and changed the question entirely to: what if money was programmable?

That shift was seismic. Bitcoin gave us digital scarcity. Ethereum gave us digital logic. Suddenly you could build anything on top of money: contracts, applications, entire financial systems, all without asking permission from a bank, a government or anyone.

Most people didn’t understand it at the time. I’ll be honest, it took me a while too. It seemed like a solution looking for a problem. But what Ethereum really did was open a door. Behind that door was everything that came next: DeFi, NFTs, DAOs and tokenised everything. The door is still open. We’re still walking through it.

The ICO Boom: When Greed Ate the Vision

2017 was chaos. Beautiful, terrifying and instructive chaos.

The ICO boom was essentially the Wild West of fundraising. Any team with a whitepaper and a Telegram group could raise millions overnight. Some of them built real things. Most of them didn’t build anything at all.

I watched people around me turn $5,000 into $500,000 in months. I also watched them turn $500,000 back into $5,000 when the music stopped.

What did we learn? Two things that are still true today. First, narrative moves markets faster than technology. The story of “this will change everything” is a more powerful financial force than the actual technology, at least in the short term. Second, most projects don’t survive contact with reality. Of the thousands of ICOs from 2017, a tiny handful matter today. The ones that survived built real utility, real communities and real revenue. Sound familiar? It should, the same filter applies to every AI startup you’re seeing right now.

DeFi Summer: The Future Arrived Early

In the summer of 2020, something extraordinary happened that most people outside crypto completely missed.

DeFi exploded. Suddenly you could lend money, borrow money, earn yield, trade assets and provide liquidity to financial markets, all without a single bank involved. Protocols like Uniswap, Aave and Compound were doing billions in volume. People were earning 20%, 50%, sometimes 100% annual yields on their crypto.

Was a lot of it unsustainable? Yes. Was some of it outright dangerous? Absolutely. But buried inside the madness was something real: the proof that you could rebuild the entire financial system as open-source software.

DeFi gave us the blueprint for what Web3 actually is at its core, not JPEGs, not hype but open financial infrastructure that nobody owns and anyone can use.

NFTs, the Metaverse and the Best Meme in History

Peak madness.

A JPEG of a rock sold for $1.3 million. A cartoon ape gave you access to a private club. People were buying virtual land in games nobody played. A Jack Dorsey first tweet was sold for $2.9 million.

I’m not going to pretend I called the top perfectly. Nobody did, but I’ll tell you what I told people at the time: the technology behind NFTs is real and important. The prices were not.

Provable digital ownership, the ability to prove you own something unique on a public ledger is a genuinely powerful primitive. We were just using it to sell overpriced art to people who didn’t understand what they were buying.

The crash that followed in 2022 wiped out 90%+ of NFT value. But the infrastructure survived and right now, NFTs are quietly being rebuilt into something more serious: tokenised real world assets, digital identity, gaming ownership and music royalties. The meme died. The technology didn’t.

The Two Collapses That Almost Broke Us

2022 hit different.

First, Luna/Terra a $40 billion algorithmic stablecoin ecosystem imploded in 72 hours. Billions evaporated and people lost their life savings. The shock was profound.

Then, in November 2022, FTX collapsed. Sam Bankman-Fried the golden boy of crypto, the one everyone trusted, the one on magazine covers turned out to be running a fraud. Customer funds had been used to prop up his trading firm. Billions gone.

These weren’t just financial disasters. They were trust disasters. They sent the entire industry into a deep winter.

But here’s what I observed from my 8 years of perspective at that point: every major crypto collapse has been caused by centralisation. Mt. Gox was a centralised exchange. Luna, centralised design flaw. FTX, centralised fraud. The decentralised protocols? Uniswap kept running. Bitcoin kept running. Ethereum kept running. Not a single block missed.

The lesson the space keeps refusing to learn is the same lesson from 2014: decentralisation isn’t the problem. It’s the solution.

Then AI Walked In and Changed Everything Again

While crypto was licking its wounds in 2023, something else was happening.

ChatGPT launched in late 2022 and by early 2023 it had 100 million users faster than any product in history. AI wasn’t coming anymore. It had arrived.

Now here’s where it gets interesting and this is where my Bitcoin OG brain started connecting dots that most people weren’t connecting yet.

AI and crypto aren’t separate stories. They’re the same story told from different angles.

Think about what AI needs to function at civilisational scale: massive compute, massive data, massive coordination between systems and trust between machines that don’t know each other. What does blockchain provide? Trustless coordination, verifiable data provenance, decentralised compute markets and programmable incentive systems.

The collision of AI and crypto is not a trend. It’s an inevitability and we’re in the first 5% of it.

Projects are already being built where AI agents hold crypto wallets, execute transactions autonomously, get paid for their work in tokens and coordinate with other AI agents through smart contracts. The idea of an AI economy, machines trading value with other machines on open rails is not science fiction. It’s being prototyped right now.

Where We Are Today And Where We’re Going

In 2024 and 2025, something important happened: Bitcoin grew up.

The approval of Bitcoin spot ETFs in the US brought institutional money, real money, into the asset class in a way that had never happened before. BlackRock, Fidelity and others are now Bitcoin custodians. Love it or hate it, that changed the game. Bitcoin is no longer a fringe internet money experiment. It’s on balance sheets.

Meanwhile, Web3 infrastructure quietly matured. Layer 2 networks made Ethereum fast and cheap. Cross-chain bridges improved and more.

And AI? AI is accelerating faster than any technology I’ve ever watched. Every quarter brings something that would have seemed impossible the quarter before.

My honest read on where we’re heading:

Bitcoin becomes the reserve asset of the digital economy. Nation states are already holding it. Companies are adding it to treasury. This trend does not reverse. It compounds.

Web3 becomes the backend infrastructure that most users never see. Just like most people don’t think about TCP/IP when they browse the internet, most people won’t think about blockchain when they use the applications built on top of it. The “crypto app” phase ends. The “app powered by crypto” phase begins.

AI agents become economic actors. Autonomous AI systems that can hold value, make decisions and transact on-chain are going to create entirely new categories of applications and entirely new categories of wealth.

How to Actually Make Money From This

I’m not going to give you financial advice. I’m going to give you something better: the pattern I’ve observed across every major wealth creation event in this space over 12 years.

The money is always made by those who understand the infrastructure before the mainstream does.

  • 2013–2014: The money was in Bitcoin itself, the base layer nobody believed in
  • 2016–2017: The money was in Ethereum and the applications being built on top of it
  • 2020: The money was in DeFi, the open financial infrastructure layer
  • 2021: The money was in NFT infrastructure and tooling, not just the NFTs themselves

Today? The money is at the intersection of AI and crypto infrastructure. The compute networks. The data verification layers. The identity systems. The agent infrastructure. The picks and shovels of the next cycle.

You don’t need to be a developer to capitalise. You need to understand these systems well enough to identify which ones are solving real problems — and then have the patience to hold through the inevitable noise.

The other play? Knowledge. In a space that moves this fast, the person who can explain what’s happening clearly, accurately and early is extraordinarily valuable. Educators, analysts, builders who communicate, this space will pay for clarity in ways that most industries never will.

One Last Thing

I’ve survived every crash, every winter, every “Bitcoin is dead” headline (there have been over 400 of them at last count) and every moment where it seemed like the whole thing might just disappear.

It didn’t disappear. It kept building.

The people who made it through weren’t necessarily the smartest or the most connected. They were the ones who understood why this technology matters deeply enough to stay when everyone else was leaving.

If you understand the why, the volatility becomes noise. The crashes become buying opportunities. The scams become education…and the scars? The scars become exactly what I’m sharing with you right now.

Stay curious. Stay sceptical. Stay long…Believe in SOMETHING!

Found this useful? Follow @crako_0 on X for more.


I’ve Been in Bitcoin Since 2014. Here’s What Nobody Tells You. was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.

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