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Yusra31
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James Howells, an IT specialist who inadvertently tossed away the hard disc of an outdated computer containing 7,500 bitcoins in 2013, is still looking for them. The 35-year-old from Newport, United Kingdom, has revealed his 12-month plan to investigate the municipal waste with x-ray scanning devices and artificial intelligence.
The British man assured: "This would be a real search not simply somebody going in with a bucket and spade."
"We have a system that includes numerous conveyor belts, x-ray scanning devices, and an AI scanning device that can recognise items of similar size and density to the hard drive."
Howells went on to say that he has been "talking to some of the top data recovery professionals in the world to make sure we can extract everything off the hard drive" for the past four or five months.The search will be expensive, but Howell claims that his proposal is backed by a wealthy hedge fund that is willing to pay for the search and the equipment in exchange for the majority of his riches..
The British man assured: "This would be a real search not simply somebody going in with a bucket and spade."
"We have a system that includes numerous conveyor belts, x-ray scanning devices, and an AI scanning device that can recognise items of similar size and density to the hard drive."
Howells went on to say that he has been "talking to some of the top data recovery professionals in the world to make sure we can extract everything off the hard drive" for the past four or five months.The search will be expensive, but Howell claims that his proposal is backed by a wealthy hedge fund that is willing to pay for the search and the equipment in exchange for the majority of his riches..