Ever wonder what it was like working for a Bitcoin company in the early days? Did you know users back then were part crazy, part generous?

I started working at BitInstant late 2012, which allowed people to buy Bitcoin with cash. In the fall of 2013, I joined Blockchain(dot)info (BCI). The early days at BCI is what I want to focus on here.

BCI was the biggest non-custodial web wallet & the most used block explorer. I wore many hats as the first employee, but my main job was handling the support tickets.

My first day at BCI was chaos. I logged into Zendesk and saw THOUSANDS of tickets as old as January 2013. There was one guy, Ben Reeves, doing everything since inception. Support wasn't the highest priority.

After initially feeling overwhelmed, I decided to clean things up. I closed all tickets older than a few weeks, and included a message apologizing for the lack of response. I assured people this would no longer be the norm, and to open a new ticket if their issue was ongoing.

I had free reign over my job, and became obsessed with making sure users received help in a reasonable amount of time. It started as a goal to respond within 24 hours of a new ticket, which turned into 12 hours. Within a few months, the average response time was down to 2-4 hours, only because I had to sleep at some point! 😂

I didn't realize how little I knew about Bitcoin until I had to answer tickets about the Bitcoin network itself. After all, we weren't just a web wallet, but a block explorer! I spent many late nights digging around on BitcoinTalk, trying to learn more, so I could help users with their questions. Learning about Bitcoin back then wasn't impossible, but it wasn't easy.

Many early users were shocked to receive a response to their questions. To hear back so quickly was unheard of. There were many Bitcoin projects back then, but most didn't have dedicated support staff. If you received a response, it would be from the founder or some other developer. These guys didn't have the resources to tackle support, especially in a timely manner.

I quickly learned about the generosity of bitcoiners. Many users requested a btc address from me so they could send a tip for the help provided. Even when I told them it was unnecessary, as I was a paid employee, they insisted on tipping.

Many of these users were nuts. 😂 Here's an example that didn't happen frequently, but it happened:

A user opens a ticket during the time I'm actively watching the queue. I see it come in, respond within minutes with a solution, and he insists on tipping. I'm like, "Bro it's cool, don't sweat it," but this madlad won't leave me alone until he tips me.

I look at my tip jar - 0.5 BTC, which is worth a few hundred USD at the time. WTF, ARE YOU INSANE?! 🤯

Part of this generous attitude was about saying thank you, but I believe a bigger part was about the early proliferation of Bitcoin.

We preach the HODL mentality today, but Bitcoin wouldn't be what it is without the generosity of early adopters. So many bitcoins were given out freely so people could learn about it firsthand.

I believe many of the tips I received were from people who, at one point, also received free btc. It felt wrong to HODL these tips, so I paid it forward. I purchased work related items so I could do my job better. I tipped people on Reddit. I donated towards bitcoin-backed fundraisers, including when Andreas fundraised for Dorian Nakamoto. I did everything I could to keep that spirit of giving alive.

The landscape today has changed, but that spirit of generosity lives on. The best example is zapping on Nostr, where people are tipping each other via LN for posts and comments. It's beautiful to see!

Thank you, early adopters, for your generosity. You're a big part of why Bitcoin is what it is today. 🧡

Be kind, be generous, and be a little crazy. 😄

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Discussion

Amazing note you've shared with us Fren 😊. Lots of great information and the early days were very different than now.

#BTC #Zap⚡#Nostr #FreeJulianAssange 🔥🚀

Awesome🫂

Nothing but respect for all you did, nostr:npub1qex7yjtuucs6ac49kjujdgytrjsphn5a4pdscu2w3qlprym4zsxqfz82qk. I still have emails from you answering my dumb questions and appreciated that you took the time to help so many people learn about #bitcoin.

You inspire me, Mandrik!

Wow. I myself had the opportunity to be a founding employee of a little startup, boy those were fun days. I'm looking for that again TBH. I wish I was old enough to understand what BTC really was those days. I stopped mining in 2014 after the first boom when difficulty turned our ASICs into paperweights. Any tips on where to find work like that again? I thought I knew how but it's seeming to be quite difficult.

Thanks for sharing your story btw.

Thanks for sharing this awesome story. You are a living part of bitcoin history sir.

TY sir! 🙏

Unexpectedly largr tips: I can confirm. Not once did it happen to me ad s designer. I made some free work and the other side was so happy, I got "tipped" more than I would asked

Word! Great story. A Bitcoin Parable. Thank you.

Great story. Thank you for sharing and preaching by example.

stay humble

distribute sats

Yes indeed! I never worked in bitcoin, but the early days people would put their address in the sig field of their bitcointalk posts and clever or helpful posts would get tips. Definitely helped get people who would become influential to have a stake in the game.

boomer; still sharing,caring,looking 4 crazy fun

Thanks for sharing! Would love to see people be generous tippers to projects they use. Zaps make it easier than ever.

Thanks for your story. Nostr IS important, and reminiscent in that way.

Preserving this “close community” will not be easy, as Nostr scales. Tools for “sharing Nostr with friends” will help. Here’s what I’m building. You might be interested.

nostr:note1y49natjtzpq05p4wt4hspwlndynte2z2ejvjevp3vwzdvtnwg4hqf605fu

what a beginning! it is wonderful to hear these stories. they will be the future of btc as much as the past. the culture is alive and the pay it forward culture is still out there.

thanks for sharing and a lovely start to a monday.

GM 🙃

Nostr does have me reminiscing about the earlier days of bitcoin and how much (now) generational wealth was joyously spread about in tips and giveaways.

The scamming and shitcoinery killed it. Once blocks were full, it didn’t make sense to send small tips when the fee to do so was on the same order of magnitude as the tip. LN and Nostr are bringing that culture back., I hope. Makes it easy to tip sats again.

(`・ω・´)ゞ

You have just described the job I am excellent at, and I so want to find work in this area and be paid in bitcoin . I did the Support work for LNTXBOT (Fiatjaf’s telegram based LN wallet project he started in 2019 and closed 2024.) He announced in January 2023 that the wallet was closing, and he took it off bolt11 and 12. He had to figure out a way for folks to empty their wallet and claim their sats. Between January and March, there were a lot of angry people. I stepped up because I am a customer support rep, with a specialty for handling irate clients. I assisted clients to claim their sats. I did not know much about lightning at that time, but I dug right into all the resources that I could possibly find understand more about it, so I could answer questions. March 2023 through to January 2024, I was on call almost 24/7 Serving clients from all over the world. I loved it. And I want more! I do go through the job listings in the Bitcoin job marketplace and I never or at least rarely see calls for CSR/support.

Great story. Tipping (spending) was indeed one part of the magic that I miss most these days outside of Monero's community funded projects.

And maybe you need to work at a Monero company to learn more about it.

love the story mate.

Let’s not forget about the gluten free almond cookies I bought from you for 4.5 BTC back then. Good times 😂

That's hilarious. I always forget I sold cookies, too! 😂

Love this! I also cut my teeth running support at a high-growth startup (how I wish it'd been in Bitcoin 😅). It can be a grind but it's also so rewarding in so many ways.

Awesome story and this is why I’ve invested in (and am such an advocate of) @geyser

To keep the spirit of bitcoin giving strong 💪

#nostr + #lightning make donations easier.

Value rewards creativity.

The charm of Bitcoin is that while you are donating Bitcoin to others, your Bitcoin savings are also increasing in value.🚀

nostr:note16zshe8wy034mnar9grc80cwtaj5qmkcyz49mdn6t4u4tn5rtc5tsaze2aa

Thanks for sharing this 🧡

Pay it forward, not pay it back, is a great way to live because we all have people who help us in life at various points - I’ve had many and am grateful to them for that help - but they don’t need the help i can offer now so my focus is like yours - pay it forward 🤝

Thank you my friend! Thanks to nostr:npub16nalm7pfrknw0kvk9vylkcpf80gx0p8h6fkrw0uwyrs5rccur3vszmc6rx one of the most passionate early adopters I have met so far

The spirit lives on ⚡🧡

Giving away bitcoin is the best way to orange pill people. But it must be done right. It should be unexpected, earned, and ideally with a little tech support. Drive by airdrops don't really work. Folks will lose interest and lose or sell their coins. You need continued contact to answer questions and keep people interested. I still have some sats an OG gave me for washing dishes many years ago. Watching them appreciate really drives home the value proposition of saving in bitcoin.

Target is to keep the number (total amount in sats) of zaps sent to my profile greater than the number of zaps received

nostr:note16zshe8wy034mnar9grc80cwtaj5qmkcyz49mdn6t4u4tn5rtc5tsaze2aa

This is exactly why I want more OGs on my server. I want Minecraft players (who are no coiners when they join in many cases) to receive generosity from those who can as they transact and learn about Bitcoin. It's a balance, but the community is great when not a little toxic🤪