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The Thank-You you never got to say, etched on Bitcoin forever

When I was a teenager, a stranger at Flinders Street Station gave me the train fare to get home. I never thanked her properly. I never even learned her name. Thirty years later, that moment became a website. Thankyou.web3 is an archive of short, sincere thank-yous — the ones people never managed to say out loud. You write yours, it gets etched permanently onto Bitcoin, and it stays there: readable for decades, impossible to quietly delete, whether or not the person it's for ever sees it. It's not a company. It's not a social network — no likes, no followers, nothing to scroll. It's closer to a library than a feed. A quiet, permanent home for the good that people do, in a world that mostly broadcasts the bad. In this video I tell the story behind it, explain in plain words why it lives on a blockchain, and walk you through the whole site — how to write a thank-you, how to send it, and the ones already inscribed. Think of the one you never said. You probably already know who it is. → Visit the archive: https://thankyou.web3 → Read the first entry, write your own, or just have a read. CHAPTERS 00:00 — A stranger at Flinders Street Station 03:26 — Title Page 04:36 — Where does the goodness go? 05:42 — Why there was never a home for it 08:32 — What thankyou.web3 is 09:24 — A walk through the site 16:01 — What it does, and doesn't, promise 16:43 — The invitation TIP THIS VIDEO AND THE THANK YOU TIPPING JAR: 1NMres8VC9B42df4gjXpLmvZfZ9ufYkfHD

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Thu, 9 Jul 2026
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Marquez Comelab