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If you look his name up on a search engine like Google or Bing, you’ll likely find, first, a photograph of an old Japanese man in a suit, with glasses. Funny enough, that’s not actually Satoshi Nakamoto —or at least, not the Bitcoin creator. Not that we’re aware of. Because that’s the thing: we don’t really know who “Satoshi Nakamoto” is, or who he or she was. We just know him/her through Bitcoin, and there are a lot of unanswered questions about his/her (or their?) identity.
The man in the photos in the search engines is Dorian Satoshi Nakamoto, an American-Japanese physicist living in California. Due to a
What we know about him (let’s assume this is the right pronoun) is that he’s a fervent
As you may know, Bitcoin is the first-ever cryptocurrency. However, it’s not the first try. Satoshi’s fellow cypherpunks have been trying to create a new form of digital cash without middlemen since well before the 21st century, with different degrees of success or, let’s say, “useful” pieces to complete the puzzle. Satoshi did just that: complete the puzzle started by his predecessors.
At the end of the Bitcoin whitepaper, released in 2008, we can find at least two other cypherpunks as references:
By relying on this mostly decentralized (more decentralized than anything before it) system, anyone could send and receive transactions without any requirements (except Internet connection) or geographical and legal restrictions. Bitcoin was launched in January 2009 for this purpose, but its use didn’t start spreading until Laszlo Hanyecz bought a pizza with 10,000 BTC back on May 22, 2010 —May 22 is now celebrated as “
By February 2011, the Bitcoin price reached parity with the US Dollar (USD). Still, nobody had much faith in it. Few adopters, companies, and miners here and there, and a market cap of around $1.6 million [CMC]. Fast forward to April 2024, Bitcoin has around 18,012 nodes worldwide [
Who made all that possible? Not to mention the whole crypto industry that followed behind, with over 2.4 million alternative digital coins (altcoins) and over 11,132 crypto companies and projects worldwide [
One prominent figure is, as we mentioned above, Dorian Nakamoto. The primary clue that led to his misidentification as Satoshi Nakamoto was a statement made by Dorian's brother, suggesting that he had been involved in classified engineering work for the government. This, combined with his background as a computer engineer and his birth name, led the reporter to conclude that Dorian was the creator of Bitcoin. He’s denied it adamantly, though.
Another candidate is
A more polemical contender is Craig Wright, an Australian computer scientist who publicly claimed to be Satoshi Nakamoto in 2016. Despite his assertions, he's failed to offer conclusive proof about it and instead has been picking legal fights with numerous members of the community. In March 2024, after unraveling the available evidence, a UK High Court
So far, every candidate but Wright has denied being Satoshi. Using his “official” communication channels and email, Satoshi stayed involved in the Bitcoin development until mid-2010, when he handed the project to a team of open-source developers led by Andresen. And just like that, his persona disappeared to likely not be seen again. Not even his
We can say that Satoshi Nakamoto created the first taste of financial freedom for everyone and, as a true cypherpunk, refused to privatize his software. Bitcoin isn’t perfect, though. The energy-intensive coin mining is especially concerning since it could be a threat to both decentralization (and censorship resistance) and the environment. Miners can cherry-pick and censor transactions, and, in an extreme colluding attack, they could even take over the network.
Meanwhile, the mining process takes around 166.8 TWh annually, which is more than numerous countries worldwide would take in a year as well [
Luckily, Bitcoin was just the first step. More cryptocurrencies with new improvements have appeared over the years, including____, which focuses on getting rid of mining and including smart contract capabilities. Instead of relying on miners to include every transaction without censorship, Obyte uses a Directed Acyclic Graph (DAG)-structured ledger. In this system, each new transaction must reference previous transactions, forming a web-like structure built collectively by network participants.
Featured Vector Image by Garry Killian /
Photograph of the statue dedicated to Nakamoto in Budapest (Image by Fekist /