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Introduction:

In the early days of Bitcoin, before exchanges and P2P markets, acquiring coins was challenging. Mining or requesting coins on the Bitcointalk forum were the primary methods. Notably, users on forums often distributed Bitcoin to newcomers.

Creation of the First Bitcoin Faucet:

In June 2010, developer Gavin Andresen initiated a groundbreaking project. He created a faucet on Bitcointalk.org that allowed anyone to claim BTC by visiting the website.
"For my first coding project with Bitcoin, I decided to do something that seems silly. I created a site that distributes Bitcoins." - Gavin Andresen

Distribution Method:

The faucet distributed 5 BTC per visitor, requiring only the completion of a captcha. While today it might seem strange to receive so much BTC for a website visit, back then, 5 BTC had minimal value in dollars.
"Only gives 5 coins [per day]," a forum user complained.

Community Response:

Laszlo, known for the famous "Bitcoin Pizza," responded, impressing even Satoshi Nakamoto:
"Excellent choice for a first project, good job. I had planned to do exactly this if someone else didn't, so when it gets too hard for mortals to generate 50BTC, new users could get some coins to play with immediately." - Satoshi Nakamoto

Impact and Usage:

While some users cherished the obtained Bitcoins, many spent them on platforms like Satoshidice and later on the Silk Road. Faucets like Andresen's paved the way for exchanging BTC for goods and services.

Security Issues:

Multiple individuals discovered security loopholes in Andresen's faucet. One even stole his BTC wallet but returned the funds, explaining how to fix the vulnerability.

Philosophy Behind the Faucet:

The site explained Bitcoins as a new form of money, not controlled by any government but by those participating in the Bitcoin payment network. The developer's motive was explicit:
"What's the secret? I want Bitcoin to be successful, so I created this little service to give you some coins to start."

Achievements:

By the time the faucet dispensed its last coins in early 2011, 19,715 BTC had passed through Andresen's Bitcoin wallet. Bitcoin itself exceeded expectations, heading toward its first peak of parabolic prices, mainstream media coverage, political censorship, and more.