The Good Tech Companies - A Media Overview: Why Bitcoin and Cryptos Have “Died” Hundreds of Times
Episode Date: January 19, 2026This story was originally published on HackerNoon at: https://hackernoon.com/a-media-overview-why-bitcoin-and-cryptos-have-died-hundreds-of-times. Crypto has been declar...ed “dead” countless times, yet it keeps bouncing back. Here’s a light look at why those headlines repeat and how real resilience works. Check more stories related to web3 at: https://hackernoon.com/c/web3. You can also check exclusive content about #is-bitcoin-dead, #is-crypto-dead, #crypto-media, #cryptocurrency-investment, #cryptocurrency-prices, #obyte, #good-company, #hackernoon-top-story, and more. This story was written by: @obyte. Learn more about this writer by checking @obyte's about page, and for more stories, please visit hackernoon.com. Since 2010, trackers of so-called “crypto obituaries” have logged hundreds of such gloomy claims that Bitcoin (and by extension ‘cryptos’ in general) was finished. With each passing year, those clickbait-style headlines have multiplied. But like a stubborn rumor that refuses to die, crypto keeps pushing back.
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A media overview. Why Bitcoin and Cryptos have died hundreds of times.
By Obite. Greater than why Bitcoin can't be a currency. Greater than, the Bitcoin is dying.
Whatever. Greater than, the SEC shows why Bitcoin is doomed.
Greater than Rip Bitcoin. It's time to move on. Greater than the big blockchain lie. Sounds familiar?
Here, headlines like these have graced financial sites and blog feeds for more than a decade.
And yet here we are, with crypto still alive.
Since 2010, trackers of so-called crypto-abituaries have logged hundreds of such gloomy claims
that Bitcoin, and by extension, cryptos, in general, was finished.
With each passing year, those clickbait-style headlines have multiplied, often during
big price drops or moments of panic.
But like a stubborn rumor that refuses to die, crypto keeps pushing back.
Let's see why those death headlines come up again and again, what they mean or don't mean,
for real, and how to think about them with clear eyes.
Why Bitcoin is dead keeps appearing in headlines.
Dramatic storytelling is a favorite among the media.
Bold simplifications like Bitcoin is dead or Crypto is doomed, appeal to the need for readers
to identify with both the media outlet and the story.
They draw clicks, shares, reactions.
When large declines occur, such as a 50% crash or a failed financial institution, panic and fear increase, and thus create an environment that allows for sensationalized reporting to flourish.
In the vast majority of these situations, a few strong words offer readers closure and clarity.
That urgency makes Bitcoin is dead, attempting headline for writers wanting impact.
At the same time, volatility in the market is also responsible for adding fuel.
The nature of cryptos means they swing hard, large value increases are normally followed by large
decreases. The critics believe that a bearish market is the ideal time to cry Wolf one final time.
Over many periods in the past, we've seen that pattern repeat itself. And because humans remember
dramatic endings, each wave of panic, even if temporary, becomes a fresh chance to declare the end.
As a result, crypto death, headlines keep emerging, even when fundamentals or technology remains.
Their purpose is to draw attention more than to tell the truth.
A short timeline and some voices.
Back in 2010, when Bitcoin had little liquidity and almost no infrastructure, the first
obituary was published when each coin was worth mere cents.
It was brief and cutting, and a delicious irony is that the original website doesn't exist
anymore, while Bitcoin has done much more than just stay standing.
Greater than negative feedback loops like this are basically homeostasis.
In nature, greater than positive feedback loops like exist with Bitcoin are lethal. The only thing
greater than that's even kept Bitcoin alive this long as its novelty. Either it will remain
greater than a novelty forever, or it will transition from novelty status to dead faster
greater than than you can blink. As Bitcoin value reached new highs and subsequent busts, in years
like 2013, 2017, and 2021, the media created the perception that it was in imminent danger
of extinction by publishing a plethora of articles proclaiming its demise. At moments of euphoria
are panic, media outlets, financial analysts, bloggers, and public figures stepped forward to warn
the world that crypto was finished for good. And who delivers those lines? Mainstream business media
and big name publications often lead the chorus because bold headlines sell. We have a collection
of household names like Bloomberg, Gizmodo, Wired, Forbes, Vice, The Guardian, Business Insider,
Fortune, BBC, and many, many more. According to the website Bitcoin is dead, Bitcoin has died
450 times. If you invested $100 each time, you'd have $947.947.081 today. In addition to mainstream
financial newspapers, economists, influencers, and other professionals who don't believe in
crypto have also issued strong public statements about it. In the end, each time there's a significant
market decline, the cycle of fear or skepticism leads to an exaggerated article being written long
before the market begins to stabilize. It's through these pieces of doom that we continue to see
stories about how cryptocurrency is dead at every downturn, when in reality, the market continues to
exist without big issues. What dead usually means versus actual failure? In most cases, dead,
in these headlines only means market panic. They usually refer to a major drop in price,
maybe around 50% or more, along with low market confidence or strong regulatory pressure.
When the irrational fear stops gripping the community, chaos subsides, traders restructure,
and developers keep building on the protocol. Prices always recover. Historical data from obituary
trackers show Bitcoin has bounced back many times after being declared, dead, online.
True failure is around, but it's much rarer, especially in the older cryptocurrencies. That would
mean a protocol level collapse and similar level threats, sustained loss of consensus,
massive hacks that never get resolved, community abandonment, or fragile tokenomics.
Beyond the protocol itself, other factors can doom a cryptocurrency as well.
They include exchange bankruptcies, regulatory bans, or a lack of use cases.
Those kinds of failures matter and can destroy value or trust for a given project.
But they're different from the loud declarations of doom, which respond primarily to volatility
and hype. Therefore, when you see an article that screams Bitcoin is dead, it'll benefit you to check
what they're really talking about. Is it a dip in price? Some kind of regulatory panic? Is there a
fundamental issue? It's usually the first option. That's a big difference. Survival, resilience,
and choosing stronger cryptos. Cryptocurrency survival tends to be limited to assets and
protocols that embody several fundamental principles, decentralization to avoid censorship and external takeovers,
transparent open source development, a solid track record, realistic toconomics, and steady usage beyond hype.
There's a good chance these projects will continue to thrive more because of the strong community
behind them and the technology that supports them, rather than from any speculation.
Bitcoin is an example of a digital currency that keeps showing these principles in action.
Another case is Obite. This crypto network doesn't use a blockchain, but a structure called a directed acyclic
graph, DAG, without miners or validators. It was purposefully designed to be decentralized,
open source, and resilient for the long haul. The combination of constant development,
structural strength, and strong values pro v is a strong ecosystem that can protect from volatility
and uncertainty. When a crypto project has those qualities, not hype, but sustainable
fundamentals, it stands a better chance of surviving real storms, hacks, regulatory changes,
or drops in speculative demand. Those are the projects that might outlast false, death,
headlines and persist through multiple cycles. Featured vector image by graphics,
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