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Crypto Daily Topic

Who is Satoshi Nakamoto (Creator of Bitcoin)? 

There’s no bigger mystery in the crypto world than the one of Bitcoin’s creator’s true identity. Satoshi Nakamoto is the pseudonym used by Bitcoin’s creator(s). More than 10 years after Bitcoin, Satoshi’s identity remains shrouded in mystery. 

The Bitcoin community is yet even to know if Satoshi is one person or a group of people. What they know is that in 2008, Satoshi published a paper: “Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System,” that completely changed finance as we know it. 

Nevertheless, that hasn’t stopped an active search for the mysterious figure. Several Satoshi ‘suspects’ have been unveiled, and not without controversy. Let’s look at some of the people widely theorized to be Satoshi. 

#1. Dorian Nakamoto

Dorian Prentice Satoshi Nakamoto is a Japanese-American engineer suspected of being Satoshi by Newsweek writer Leah McGrath Goodman back in 2014. At the time, McGrath published an ‘expose’: “The Face Behind Bitcoin.” McGrath had established that Nakamoto had previously worked as a systems engineer on classified projects for the US government and a computer engineer for financial services companies. 

McGrath said Nakamoto had let slip that he was the founder of Bitcoin. She alleged that during a face-to-face interview with him, he’d said about the currency: “I am no longer involved in that, and I cannot discuss it,” adding, “It’s been turned over to other people. They are in charge of it now. I no longer have any connection.” 

However, when he’d said he’s no longer involved with that, he’d meant his work with classified military projects years ago. Both in The Associated Press and on a Reddit Ask Me Anything, he said that he’d misinterpreted McGrath’s question as being related to that work. 

The “discovery” of Dorian Nakamoto was particularly mired in controversy. The Bitcoin community was not pleased with the “hit-job” type of piece – complete with a picture of his house – that McGrath wrote about him.  

The community also took notice of a message published for the first time in years on Nakamoto’s P2P Foundation site, saying, “I am not Dorian Nakamoto.” 

#2. Adam Back 

Adam Back is the CEO of blockchain company Blockstream. Some sections of the Bitcoin community suspect he’s Satoshi Nakamoto thanks to a YouTube video called “Unmasking Satoshi Nakamoto” Posted by the channel “Barely Sociable.” The video talks about several clues about why Back may be Satoshi Nakamoto. 

One of those reasons is that he was describing the technology underlying Bitcoin as far back as 1998. He also kind of disappeared from the public when Satoshi was actively involved in the project. Barely Sociable also pointed out that both Back and Satoshi use double spacing in their words, and they use British English spelling. The video also mentioned the possibility that Back can always leverage plausible deniability about the claim. After the video was published, Back engaged in a back and forth with Barely Sociable on Twitter. At the time of writing, the YouTube video has 548,592 views on Twitter. 

#3. Wei Dai 

Wei Dai is a computer engineer and cryptographer. He’s the creator of the b-money currency system and a fixture in the digital currency community ecosystem. On August 23, 2008, Satoshi Nakamoto wrote to Dai acknowledging his contribution to Bitcoin:” I was very interested to read your b-money page. I’m getting ready to release a paper that expands on your ideas into a complete working system.” 

Most of the evidence linking Dai to Bitcoin is substantial, though, and there’s no smoking gun evidence to prove that he really is Satoshi. Such evidence is based on the fact that Dai has the ability to create such a project, as well as his intensely private manner that is akin to Satoshi’s.

Also, if Dai were Satoshi, that means he’d have to have been playing a “double agent” role writing to himself and communicating with himself. This is highly unlikely.

#4. Hal Finney 

Hal Finney is an American cryptography pioneer who died of ALS in 2014. In the same year, Forbes journalist Andy Greenberg wrote an article on Hal Finney, highlighting that he was not only Dorian Nakamoto’s neighbor, but also a pioneer in the cypherpunk and cryptography space. Not only that, Finney had been the first-ever recipient of a BTC transaction from Satoshi. 

Greenberg then worked with writing analysis firm Juola & Associates and asked them to compare Finney’s writing with that of Satoshi. Apparently, they found his writing was closer to Satoshi’s than other candidates submitted to Newsweek, Fast Company, and the New Yorker. But they also found Satoshi’s emails to Finney more closely resembled the style in Bitcoin’s original white paper as compared to Finney’s emails. 

Greenberg theorized that Finney could have been a ghostwriter for Nakamoto or has used his neighbor Dorian Nakamoto as cover. Finney denied being Satoshi. After Greenberg met Finney and saw the email exchanges between them and his and Bitcoin’s wallet history, he concluded that he was telling the truth. 

#5. Craig Wright 

Craig Wright is an Australian computer scientist and techpreneur. On Dec 8, 2015, Wired ran an article by Andy Greenberg and Gwern Branwen describing an Australian academician called Craig Stephen Wright who “either invented bitcoin or is a brilliant hoaxer who very badly wants us to believe he did.” 

The same day, Gizmodo published a story featuring documents allegedly obtained by a hacker who breached or “breached” Wright’s email accounts, claiming that Satoshi Nakamoto was a joint pseudonym for Craig Wright and his longtime friend, Dave Kleiman. Kleiman was a computer forensics expert who died in mysterious circumstances in 2013.

Following the article, Wright quickly disappeared from the web for several months only to resurface on May 2, 2016, and declare that he was Bitcoin’s creator. He also wrote an article apologizing for taking the original private approach and a refusal to provide proof of access to one of Bitcoin’s earliest keys. Several publications have rubbished the claims that Wright is Satoshi. He’s also currently embroiled in litigation with Dave Kleiman’s estate. The lawsuit claims Wright defrauded Kleiman of millions of worth of Bitcoin. 

#6. Nick Szabo 

Nick Szabo is a computer scientist, legal and cryptography scholar who’s widely credited for pioneering the concept of smart contracts in the ’90s. In 2008, he developed a decentralized currency – Bit Gold, which he described as “a protocol whereby unforgeable costly bits could be created online with minimal dependence on trusted third parties.” This is in agreement with Bitcoin, in which bits produced by a distributed network of computers worldwide independently verify transactions.

Writer Dominic Frisby floated the idea that Nick Szabo is Satoshi in his book “Bitcoin: The Future of Money?” Frisby talked to a stylometric analyst who apparently concluded that Szabo’s writing style is similar to Satoshi’s. His other ‘proof’ was that both Szabo and Satoshi reference legendary Austrian economist Carl Menger. Frisby also established Szabo had worked for DigiCash, a cryptographic electric money attempt in the early ’90s. According to Frisby, all these clues alluded to Szabo being Satoshi. 

However, Szabo has repeatedly refuted the idea that he’s Satoshi, saying to Frisby in one of their correspondences: “Thanks for letting me know. I’m afraid you got it wrong doxing me a Satoshi, but I’m used to it.” 

Final Thoughts

The fervor behind Bitcoin’s creator is understandable. After all, the currency is not just digital money – it’s a movement – one that has shaken the very core of finance. Some of the people mentioned in the list are known for their pioneering work that helped lay the foundation of Bitcoin. Others have been active in the currency’s development from the beginning, while others appear to ride on the coin’s popularity for whatever ends. But if you think about it, the mystery surrounding Bitcoin is partly behind its wild success and possibly its ‘untouchable’ status. The Bitcoin community and, indeed, the world should be happy that we have Bitcoin and not be so fixated on its creator. 

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Crypto Videos

The Satoshi Nakamoto Controversy! Has He Been Discovered?

The Satoshi Nakamoto Controversy: What Happened to his Crypto?

The past month has been very interesting in terms of Satoshi Nakamoto-related news, and it all started with someone mysteriously moving $1.6 million in Bitcoin from the address that could be one of Satoshi Nakamoto’s.
While most experts believe that the cryptocurrency transfer was done by one of the first-month Bitcoin miners rather than Satoshi themselves, others believe that there might be something else in play. However, this is not the complete story, as often-called Faketoshi Craig Wright came into the limelight and stirred up more uncertainty.

Wright vs. Kleiman

The case between Craig Wright and Ira Kleiman has been lasting for quite some time, with its final jury trial set for July 6. Craig Wright has announced that he is the real Satoshi Nakamoto, and claims that he has the private keys to the Bitcoin addresses that Satoshi should have access to. However, Kleiman’s side does not believe he is the real Satoshi Nakamoto, claiming that Wright might have access to these addresses, but that he cannot show the court that he has the access, as the addresses contain a proof of partnership between him and late Dave Kleiman.

The Encrypted File

Kleiman’s legal team said that Wright’s refusal to open the encrypted file suggests he knows that its contents will certainly include partnership records between Wright and Kleiman. The contents of the file will, as they said, show that 820,200 Bitcoins belong to the partnership rather than just to Craig Wright.
While this case unfolds, the public is waiting to see how everything resolves as they are looking for any clues on who Satoshi Nakamoto might be.

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Crypto Daily Topic

Craig Wright Compared To Jesus amid His Book Being Dropped By Publisher

One of the tenets of Bitcoin, the world’s first cryptocurrency, is complete transparency. It’s therefore ironic (wonderfully so) that ten years after its launch, the world doesn’t know who its creator is, Or was. Predictably, that has led to a flurry of speculation about who designed Bitcoin, with many names being advanced as the possible candidates for the mystery creator. However, the candidates named as the potential creators have all but declined the suggestion.

Craig Wright, the Self-declared Satoshi

This is in stark contrast with Craig Wright, an Australian computer scientist who has fervently and consistently declared himself the creator of Bitcoin. The Bitcoin community has watched with bewilderment as he makes one claim after another. These claims are confounding, to say the least, especially considering Satoshi Nakamoto’s last publicly known message was in 2011 to Gavin Andresen, one of the developers associated with Bitcoin in the beginning. Also, much of Satoshi’s correspondence with the early Bitcoin community paint a picture of a person who was shy of the spotlight.

By contrast, Craig Wright is a man who laps all the attention and threatens to sue anyone who accuses him of fraud, including Vitalik Buterin, Ethereum’s creator. This is despite him refusing or being unable to provide any tangible proof that he is the creator of Bitcoin. Specifically, he hasn’t provided any proof that he wrote the original Bitcoin white paper or collaborated with any of the early developers.

Is Wright Like Jesus?

But that hasn’t prevented him from garnering sympathizers. One of these is Kevin Pham, a crypto writer who calls himself a Bitcoin SV minimalist and a reformed Bitcoin attack dog. With 26k Twitter followers at the time of writing, the man has a bit of following in the crypto community. It’s for this reason that his recent tweet comparing Craig Wright to Jesus raised eyebrows and generated a succession of disapproving comments. 

In his tweet, Pham boldly declares that Bitcoiners rejecting Wright is akin to Jews rejecting Jesus. He goes on to add history will judge Bitcoiners harshly. Of course, Bitcoiners are not buying it.

Wright’s Book Suspended

Meanwhile, a book purporting to dive into Wright’s place in Bitcoin has been suspended by an Australian publisher a week before it was to be published.  The book titled “Behind the Mask: Craig Wright and the Battle for Bitcoin” had been hotly anticipated by the cryptosphere, but it looks like it will not be forthcoming at least in the foreseeable future.

According to CoinGeek, a crypto publication owned by Wright’s friend, Calvin Ayre, the publisher has dropped the book indefinitely. The book had plenty of orders already placed, with Wright claiming he was one of the people who had ordered a copy.

Ayre published an angry tweet castigating the pulling, writing “how is it possible that a book about Craig and the creation of Bitcoin, was pulled a week before publishing and Craig was cooperating with the production and had ordered some for him and family and he finds out in an article by a nobody site that is blaming him for pulling it?”. He has since vowed to publish the book himself.

Rumors were rife in the crypto community that Wright had threatened the authors with litigation, but he has reportedly denied doing so. Mickey, an Australian news site, first broke the story that Affirm Press, the publisher, had dropped the book. In an email to the site, the publisher had expressed legal fears, stating, “Unfortunately, that book has been canceled from our publication list. The threat of publication was too high.” As for the source of legal fears, that remains a mystery.

Do you think Wright should be compared with Jesus? And do you think he is the creator of Bitcoin? Whatever the case may be, it’s clear the drama has no end in sight.

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Crypto Guides

Bitcoin – The First Scalable Cryptocurrency Ever!

In the previous article, we have discussed the evolution and properties of cryptocurrencies. Now, let’s understand Bitcoin, which is the first scalable cryptocurrency.

Introduction

It has been around 11 years since Bitcoin has come into our lives. I am saying that because everyone who knows about bitcoin, at some point, would have wondered should they invest in it or not. Some have invested and gained so much from it. I’m sure you would have heard of the term Bitcoin millionaires. Of course, some have seen losses as well. Ever since the inception of Bitcoin, there is so much talk and hype about cryptocurrencies. Some governments have even made some changes to the existing laws to support cryptocurrencies. While some governments made laws against this digital currency. It all began with one crypto, Bitcoin. Hence, it is important for us to know the evolution of Bitcoin, which is still considered as a synonym of cryptocurrency.

How it all began?

It all began when a pseudonymous person called Satoshi Nakamoto released a whitepaper on October 31, 2008. The white paper described the blockchain technology and the Bitcoin cryptocurrency. When the technologists read the document, many thought it is ground-breaking technology and wanted to see it working in rea, while some wanted to explore the properties of blockchain other than cryptocurrencies. Nakamoto not only released the white paper but also mined the first block of the Bitcoin network in Jan 2009. Thus, he began the journey of Bitcoin.

The first-ever recorded transaction

The first recorded purchase transaction using Bitcoin happened in May 2010. Laszlo Hanyecz, a computer programmer,  paid 10,000 BTC for 2 Pizzas, and it was merely $25 back then. At today’s price of the bitcoin, the pizzas cost around $80 million. Cryptonizers celebrate that day as Bitcoin Pizza day to date.

Price history

In July 2010, the price of one Bitcoin was at $0.08. In February of 2011, the price came up to $1. Then it gradually started increasing as more and more people came to know of it and started investing. By June 2011, the price surged to $11. By April 2013, the bitcoin achieved a three-digit rate of $266. By November, the same year, it reached a four-digit figure of $1242.

Picture Credits – bitcoinwiki.org

From there on, there have been fluctuations depending on the demand and various rumors about the coin. In 2017 December, the price rose to $19,783.06, the highest ever. As of October 2019, the price of one Bitcoin is $8,300.

Birth of new coins from Bitcoin

Bitcoin Cash and Bitcoin Gold are two coins forked from the Bitcoin blockchain. These are some of the major altcoins (alternate coins) in today’s cryptocurrency market. Bitcoin inspired the birth of many other cryptocurrencies. We can say that these altcoins emerged only after Bitcoin proved the market potential. Ethereum, Litecoin, XRP are some of the examples.

Emergence of the cryptocurrency market

Cryptocurrency exchanges started their operations after the rise of new cryptos in the market. Bitcoinmarket.com is the first exchange ever. However, the exchange is defunct now. In July of the same year, Mt.Gox was launched as well. Around 2013 and in early 2014, nearly 75% of the Bitcoins transaction across the world happened through Mt.Gox. In 2014, they had to liquidate the funds because nearly 850,000 bitcoins were stolen from the exchange. This is the biggest disaster in Bitcoin history ever.

Bottom line

At present, everything in our life is getting digitalized. So why not the currency we use? Bitcoin is that new-age digital currency which has a massive potential to transform the currency space. It is not too much to say that it has achieved the same already. Let’s see what more wonders this crypto can create in the near future. Stay tuned for more exciting and engaging content. Cheers!