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For close to ten years many people have been on the hunt for the elusive Satoshi Nakamoto, creator of the decentralized technology called Bitcoin. This year the race to find the anonymous character, or group of individuals, who designed the peer-to-peer electronic cash system has been hotter than ever with more clues left behind â Hereâs what we know so far.Â
**This is part one of a two-part story. Part two features a full-length interview with a man who claims to be a member of the Satoshi Nakamoto group, but has no verifiable proof.**Â
Ten Years Worth of Satoshi Nakamoto Suspects, Dead Ends, and Now the Growing Trend of Group Theories
Satoshi Nakamoto is the anonymous creator of the Bitcoin technology and the entire cryptocurrency economy today is based on Nakamotoâs words and original code. Satoshi is an unknown person or group who wrote the original white paper, launched the network, made the first transaction, communicated with software developers between 2008-2010, and possibly possesses over 1 million bitcoins. Since the creation of blockchain technology lots of people and news-outlets like Newsweek, Wired, Gizmodo, BBC, GQ, New York Times, Bloomberg, Fast Company, and many others have tried to uncover the mystery. Thereâs a lot of evidence, clues, and research on the subject and multiple suspects.
Some people believe knowing who Satoshi is doesnât matter. Other people believe Bitcoinâs creator does matter, as he could possibly help with scaling conflicts, and then thereâs the possibility of the alleged 1M bitcoins mined could affect the price if they were dumped on the market. Either way the hunt for Satoshi just out of mere curiosity alone has encouraged armchair sleuths and journalists to seek out the unknown person(s).
One of the first suspects in the search for Nakamoto is Hal Finney, a man who worked with Satoshi during the early days testing the protocol. Finney was an excellent cryptographer and was allegedly the first person to run the original Bitcoin protocol. Back in 2014 the journalist Andy Greenberg wrote an article called âNakamotoâs Neighbor: My Hunt For Bitcoinâs Creator Led To A Paralyzed Crypto Geniusâ which explains that Hal Finney could have been Satoshi. According to Greenbergâs article, Finney could have also helped the Satoshi group âghost writeâ some of the writings shared online. The reason this theory is bolstered is because the well-known writing analysis organization, Juola & Associates, detailed that Nakamotoâs and Finneyâs writings had the closest resemblance.
Similar Writing StyleÂ
Nick Szabo
Another accused person who many people believe is Satoshi is the computer scientist Nick Szabo. The financial author Dominic Frisby had shown some circumstantial evidence in his novel connecting Szabo to Nakamoto. Szabo has denied being Nakamoto in an email to Frisby concerning the subject. Furthermore, Szabo has been linked to Satoshi Nakamoto through a writing analysis called stylometry. A writer named Skye Grey (and others) seem to believe Szaboâs writings are very similar to the Bitcoin white paper.Â
The Fake News Victim
Dorian Prentice Satoshi Nakamoto denies being involved with Bitcoin.
In 2014 the reporter Leah McGrath Goodman wrote an article for the publication Newsweek which said a Japanese American man living in California was the elusive creator of Bitcoin. Dorian Prentice Satoshi Nakamoto, whose real birth name is Satoshi Nakamoto, is an engineer who worked on many classified defense projects as a contractor for multiple businesses. The Newsweek reporterâs âevidenceâ was when she asked Dorian about Bitcoin he replied: âI am no longer involved in that and I cannot discuss it.â However, after the article had published Dorian denied being involved with the creation of the Bitcoin technology and said he misinterpreted Goodmanâs original question. Dorian has been praised as a lovable guy who was a victim of bad journalism.
Craig Wright & the GroupÂ
The Australian academic Craig Steven Wright first got major attention on December 8, 2015, after appearing with his partner David Kleiman in two articles written by Wired, and then Gizmodo. Allegedly a hacker had stolen emails from Wright which explain that he and Kleiman were part of the Satoshi Nakamoto group, which may also have had 1-2 more players. There are numerous other articles by Motherboard Vice, and others that have different clues to the Craig Wright case. After the articles, Wright subsequently deleted his online presence and wasnât heard from again until May 2, 2016.
On December 8, 2015, Gizmodo and Wired revealed a very interesting story concerning Craig Wrightâs involvement with Bitcoin. Original cover photo via Gizmodo.Â
In 2016, Wright reappeared and claimed he was Satoshi Nakamoto, and when he returned both Gavin Andresen and Jon Matonis vouched for his claim. Furthermore, Wright attempted to show cryptographic proof that he was Satoshi Nakamoto, but these claims were refuted by some researchers and called fraudulent by others. Â Â
Now this year more clues have been unraveling in regard to the Craig Wright case. Back in February 2018, Wright was sued for billions by the family of David Kleiman. The case 9:18-cv-80176-bb filed in Florida explains the plaintiff Ira Kleiman wants a settlement for 300,000BTC. According to the case, which also corroborates with the Wired and Gizmodo articles, the court documents explain that Wright, Kleiman, and possibly others have keys to a BTC trust held in escrow in Seychelles which may unlock in 2020. The âTulip Trustâ will allegedly give Wright 1 million BTC, and Ira Kleiman (Davidâs sibling) believes his brotherâs estate deserves their share. Evidence online shows that Wright and Kleiman were partners in business, along with a secretary named Uyen Nguyen whose online presence has disappeared. Other than that, the main evidence from case 9:18-cv-80176-bb stems from the emails Ira Kleiman has and stories his brother David told him.
David Kleiman a suspected member of the Satoshi Nakamoto group.Another Player?Â
Then on August 29, a man named Phil Wilson, who has written some interesting topics on the origins of Bitcoin last year, discussed the âTulip Trustâ on Twitter. Wilson claims to be a member of the Satoshi Nakamoto group, and worked with Wright and Kleiman on the project during the Genesis days. Wilson has also written about the creation of the Bitcoin logo, and explains that he was the person who designed the original symbol. However Wilson says âI donât have access to any emails or IRC logs to reference and confirm specific events, actions or dates, but itâs not complete fiction because some of the main events took place similarly to how Iâve recalled them.â Wilson says his âassistants/ surrogatesâ were Dave Kleiman and Craig Wright, and they mostly knew him as âJamie.â Moreover, Wilson details that on January 1, 2020, the 1 million BTC in the trust addresses will unlock and Wright will have access to the funds.
News.Bitcoin.com Speaks With Phil Wilson AKA âJamie Wilson or Scrontyâ
However, a few days later after Wilson tweeted about the âTulip Trust,â Wright wrote four posts on Twitter specifically directed at Wilsonâs recent statements and origin story. Â Â
âOne thing I will say â Phil Wilson knew nothing at all about bitcoin before 2011 and that he tried to extort me for money â I shall provide sufficient evidence to enable a criminal fraud prosecution against âScronty,â explains Craig Wright on August 31. âThis material shall be compiled and released in September â It shall include his extortion attempt and far more â Sorry â He has nothing to do with Bitcoin, and his fall will be an example.â
There is no Phil âJamieâ Wilson â Jamie Wilson is a completely separate person to Phil Wilson. So, any emails involving myself and Jamie are unrelated to P Wilsonâs identity fraud.
An Interview With Phil Wilson Part One
Following this, news.Bitcoin.com discussed the Bitcoin âoriginsâ story with Phil Wilson who doesnât have any hard evidence that he was part of the group, but says he has the right to express his memories. We asked him about the latest Twitter statements Craig Wright was writing publicly about him and his online alias âScronty.â
âCraig seems to be a tad aggressive towards a supposed âno-body,'â Wilson explains to news.Bitcoin.com.
News.Bitcoin.com (BC): Ok. But you say you worked with Craig and Dave?
Phil Wilson (PW): I initially was trying to help Craig with his attempt at an electronic cash. I left his project in mid-May 2008 when it became apparent that it would never work. Then I started my own project in early June 2008 and got Dave and Craig to help me with it.
BC: That would be the original client?Â
PW: Yep â What everyone knows as Bitcoin evolved out of my project, not Craigâs. Practically nothing from his code was left. Only the generic crypto functions were taken from his codebase (which was copy/ pasted from elsewhere). The white paper heâd been working on from before 2007 was effectively thrown out. It was complete junk. Just a mish-mash of other peopleâs white papers.
To be continued: The rest of the interview with Phil Wilson will be published in its entirety in the next part of this story.
What do you think about the latest clues concerning Satoshi Nakamotoâs identity? Do you believe any of these theories and claims? Let us know what you think in the comment section below.Â
Images via Shutterstock, Wiki Commons, Twitter, Gizmodo, Newsweek, and Pixabay. Â
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