Who is Satoshi Nakamoto? The inventor of Bitcoin? What is bitcoins history?


Article from Coinbase Newsletter


The real identity of Bitcoin’s inventor is crypto’s greatest mysteryAn anonymous digital face

On January 3rd, 2009 — at around 18:15:05 UTC — Satoshi Nakamoto mined the very first bitcoin. Which was fitting, given that Satoshi is to Bitcoin as Alexander Graham Bell was to the telephone. The inventor had revealed the creation to a tiny online community of cryptography-obsessed computer scientists and hackers two months earlier. In that scene, Satoshi was already a familiar name — if not a real one. Years before the world heard a peep about Bitcoin, someone using the Satoshi pseudonym had been posting to message boards and emailing fellow developers, never identifying a location, a nationality, or even a real name. Satoshi released Bitcoin and saw it begin to catch on, and then — in April 2011 — sent an email to a developer friend saying, “I’ve moved on to other things.” 

After that? Satoshi disappeared into thin air.

What Satoshi said about Bitcoin

The question of the real identity of Bitcoin’s creator is one of the greatest modern mysteries. Who was Satoshi Nakamoto? Why that name? And where did Satoshi go? Beyond having invented an entirely new kind of money that has gone on to achieve a market cap of more than $1 trillion, Satoshi is widely believedOpens in a new tab. to hold more than a million bitcoin, which would be worth tens of billions of dollars in March 2021. 

(Note: In some of the early-Bitcoin history portions of this story, we refer to Satoshi as “he” or “him” because the people Satoshi was communicating with at the time presumed Bitcoin’s creator to be a young man. But of course Satoshi’s gender is one of the unknowns. Another is whether Bitcoin’s inventor worked alone; some experts suspect that Satoshi is actually a group of developers.) 

If Satoshi left clues, they can be found in the code and messages the crypto inventor wrote between 2008 to 2011. The entire output, numbering just a few hundred total messages that mostly consist of posts to a forum he created called BitcoinTalk in 2009, has been meticulously catalogedOpens in a new tab. like a sacred text. At this point, millions of people have pored over Satoshi’s words, but when they were first written they were mostly read by a few dozen hermetic members of the Cryptography Mailing List — made up of programmers who specialize in inventing techniques for secure communication. Many on the mailing list identified as “cypherpunks” who advocated the use of cryptography to bring about social and political change.

By his own account, Satoshi began coding the first version of Bitcoin in the C++ programming language sometime in the spring of 2007. In 2008, he shared his idea with a couple of fellow cryptographers who had launched the proto-cryptocurrencies b-money and Hashcash. Soon after, he shared his idea more widely via the Cryptography Mailing List. 

Bitcoin was initially greeted with a collective yawn. “When Satoshi announced Bitcoin on the cryptography mailing list, he got a skeptical reception at best,” recalledOpens in a new tab. legendary cryptographer Hal Finney, the first person to ever receive bitcoin from Satoshi. “Cryptographers have seen too many grand schemes by clueless noobs. They tend to have a knee-jerk reaction.” 

Satoshi’s October 2008 announcement — a whitepaper outlining the mechanics of BitcoinOpens in a new tab. — didn’t have the bombastic tone you’d expect from someone who understood he was about to change the world. “I’ve been working on a new electronic cash system that’s fully peer-to-peer, with no trusted third party,” Satoshi wrote matter of factly. 

But the nine-page, equation-filled treatise did introduce a solution to a knotty problem that had bedevilled the cypherpunk community for years. No prior digital money concept had cracked what Satoshi referred to as “the double-spending problem.” 

How can you prevent a currency with no physical form from being duplicated like any other computer file and spent over and over — the way kids shared endless copies of Eminem mp3s via Napster earlier in the 2000s? 

“We propose a solution to the double-spending problem using a peer-to-peer network,” Satoshi wrote. 

A peer-to-peer system would eliminate the need for any kind of central authority (like a credit card company or a bank) to validate transactions. The need for central authorities, Satoshi reasoned, was the failure point for earlier attempts at digital currencies. “A lot of people automatically dismiss e-currency as a lost cause because of all the companies that failed since the 1990’s,” he wroteOpens in a new tab.. “I hope it’s obvious it was only the centrally controlled nature of those systems that doomed them. I think this is the first time we’re a decentralized, non-trust-based system.” 

To accomplish this “trustless” system, Satoshi proposed a publicly available shared ledger that would document every transaction. He called it the “blockchainOpens in a new tab..” (Read more about how Bitcoin worksOpens in a new tab..)

Bitcoin’s independence from the existing financial system was an idea that must have been particularly appealing at the time, given that Satoshi had just witnessed the global financial system melt down over vastly irresponsible bets made by big investment banks. 

“The root problem with conventional currency is all the trust that’s required to make it work,” Satoshi notedOpens in a new tab.. “Banks must be trusted to hold our money and transfer it electronically, but they lend it out in waves of credit bubbles with barely a fraction in reserve.” 

In the “trust-based model” of internet commerce, third parties like payment processors reap rewards for acting as an intermediary. Bitcoin could make the intermediaries obsolete. And by 2010, the idea had attracted considerable attention outside the insular cryptography scene. 

That December,  an article in PC WorldOpens in a new tab. suggested that Bitcoin might be a tool Wikileaks could use to avoid government interference. Satoshi reacted with uncommon emotion. “It would have been nice to get this attention in any other context,” he noted on the Bitcoin forum. “WikiLeaks has kicked the hornet’s nest, and the swarm is headed towards us.” 

Following the breadcrumb trail

Journalists, hackers, and intelligence agencies have all scrutinized the breadcrumbs Satoshi left behind in the hopes of divining the Bitcoin inventor’s identity. Though Satoshi pointedly never shared any personal details in his communications, he did once describe himself (in a profile on a peer-to-peer forumOpens in a new tab.) as a 37-year-old man living in Japan — a fact that pretty much nobody believes. So where was he actually from? 

Satoshi left a potential Easter egg in the metadata of the Genesis block — the very first bitcoin ever mined: “The Times 03/Jan/2009 Chancellor on brink of second bailout for banks”. The text comes from a headline in that day’s Times of London. Satoshi also made  liberal use of Britishisms like “favour,” “maths,” “flat” (for his apartment), and the phrase “bloody hard.” All of which would point to the inventor as hailing from or being a resident of the United Kingdom — unless Satoshi had been devising red herrings since his earliest days of conceiving Bitcoin.

Researchers, poring over timestamps from Satoshi’s various online activities, narrowedOpens in a new tab. the Bitcoin creator’s likely time zones to the UK (GMT), US Eastern (EST), or the US Pacific (PST). 

There are those who are convinced that Satoshi isn’t in fact one person at all, but rather a team of programmers, perhaps even including someone working inside the NSA. “He’s a world-class programmer, with a deep understanding of the C++ programming language,” Dan Kaminsky, one of the world’s top Internet security researchers, told The New YorkerOpens in a new tab. in 2011. “He understands economics, cryptography, and peer-to-peer networking.” 

Kaminsky’s conclusion? “Either there’s a team of people who worked on this or this guy is a genius.” 

Unmasking Satoshi

If Satoshi is indeed only one person, he belongs to a very specialized group of programmers that probably numbers in the dozens. Guesses about his identity have abounded. Some have been ridiculous. In 2014, Newsweek announced with great fanfareOpens in a new tab. that the magazine had located Bitcoin’s creator  in Southern California — in the form of a 64-year-old retired physicist named Dorian Satoshi Nakamoto. Judging from his genuine befuddlement upon learning about his alleged creation, this Nakamoto clearly only possessed a similar name. (Satoshi, or someone possessing his login info, reappeared on the Bitcoin forum in 2014 to declareOpens in a new tab., “I am not Dorian Nakamoto.”) 

Naturally, a wide variety of characters have claimed to be Satoshi. There is Jörg Molt, a German ex-DJ with Las Vegas-magician hair who has marketed himself as “cofounder of Bitcoin” to sell, among other things, a Bitcoin-branded sparkling wineOpens in a new tab.. And Australian Craig Steven Wright, who, according to a 2019 Wired article, “either…invented bitcoin, or [is] a brilliant hoaxer who very badly wants us to believe he did.” 

Two of the most plausible suspects have both denied the connection. First is cryptographic pioneer Hal Finney (the cypherpunk who was one of Bitcoin’s first users). He died of ALS in 2014, but was adamant even on his deathbed that he neither was Satoshi nor knew the Bitcoin inventor’s actual identity. Late into his ALS, he laboriously respondedOpens in a new tab. to a Forbes reporter’s questions via eye-tracking software: “You have records of how I reacted to the announcement of Bitcoin, and I struggled to understand it. I suppose you could retort that I was able to fake it, but I don’t know what I can say to that. I’ve done some changes to the Bitcoin code, and my style is completely different from Satoshi’s. I program in C, which is compatible with C++, but I don’t understand the tricks that Satoshi used.”

Another prominent suspectOpens in a new tab. is computer scientist and cypherpunk Nick Szabo (author of the smart contract concept that powers decentralized finance apps and creator of 1998 Bitcoin precursor Bit Gold), who has consistently denied his involvement. One simple reason to believe him? Szabo has been an active participant in the crypto scene before, during, and after Bitcoin under his own name. Why would he have created a phony identity for this one project?

There’s also the tragic, persistent speculationOpens in a new tab. that Satoshi might have been a wunderkind cryptographer named Len Sassaman, who killed himself in 2011 following a long battle with depression. Indeed, two months before Sassaman’s suicide, in one of Satoshi’s final communications, Bitcoin’s inventor sent a cryptic email to another developer saying that he “probably won’t be around in the future.”  

Why Satoshi might want to remain anonymous

If the real Satoshi lives and breathes, there are some compelling reasons to stay hidden. The US government has a well-established track record of prosecuting individuals audacious enough to invent a competitor to the dollar. As The New Yorker reported,Opens in a new tab. the FBI has declared it to be “a violation of federal law for individuals . . . to create private coin or currency systems to compete with the official coinage and currency of the United States.” In fact, federal prosecutors pursued a range of charges against the founders of a startup called e-Gold in 2007, claiming that their outfit didn’t explicitly prevent money laundering or other crimes. 

Assuming Bitcoin’s creator is alive, Satoshi could be on track to becoming the richest human being on the planet. But there’s one more fascinating twist. Because the Bitcoin blockchain is open, it’s possible for researchers to plausibly identify much of the bitcoin Satoshi mined in the early days of his invention. After the very beginning, when Satoshi sent a few bitcoin to early testers like Finney, Satoshi’s coins seem to have never been sent or spent or capitalized on in any way. Over more than a decade, as the Bitcoin inventor’s holdings have grown to be worth potentially tens of billions of dollars, the share of money Satoshi quite literally made has sat untouched — a vast cache of so-called “lost coins” that could be in circulation but aren’t. 

So who is Satoshi? One of the prime suspects? One of the many other people that have been identified as Bitcoin’s creator over the years? Someone nobody has ever suspected? Is Satoshi alive or dead? A single inventor or a team? As the years have passed it seems increasingly likely that we’ll never know the answers. 

What we’re left with is Satoshi’s trillion-dollar creation, a small cache of communications, and maybe one final gift. “Lost coins only make everyone else’s coins worth slightly more,” Satoshi wrote, in response to a 2010 BitcoinTalk thread about users losing access to their wallets. “Think of it as a donation to everyone.”

Bitcoin (BTC), the world’s first public blockchain cyrptocurrency is 13 years old! BTC is a decentralised digital currency that was formed in January 2009 and its actual inventor is known only by a pseudonym, Satoshi Nakamoto. 

In January 2009, Hal Finney received 10 Bitcoins as a reward for mining block-70. This was also the first time the name Satoshi Nakamoto was heard of as the probable creator of the Bitcoin network.  

“Bitcoin’s creation is a seminal point in human civilization. And it will accelerate democratisation of societies,” says Ajeet Khurana, a crypto project advisor and investor.  

Opens in a new tab.

So, here’s a flashback of Bitcoin, the world’s oldest cryptocurrency’s thrilling journey so far. 

2009: First BTC Transaction 

In the afternoon of January 12, 2009,  computer programmer Hal Finney received the world’s first bitcoin mining reward (10 BTC) for mining the block-70. He received the tokens from ‘Satoshi Nakamoto’ and since then it has been widely speculated that it was Satoshi who created the Bitcoin blockchain network since he also published Bitcoin’s whitepaper back in 2008. 

“As of today, Bitcoin has a market cap of over $872 billion and is emerging as a popular alternative asset class among people, financial institutions and more,” says Nischal Shetty, CEO, WazirX. 

2010: Pizza Sells For BTC  

A year later, Bitcoin was still a novelty product and only enthusiasts and computer geeks interacted with it. But a programmer paid 10,000 BTC for two Papa John’s Pizza pies; 10,000 BTC would be worth roughly $613 million today. 

Here is the history from my favorite crypto newsletter. MilkRoad

HAPPY BITCOIN PIZZA DAY 🍕
Today is a historic day…Bitcoin Pizza Day. The second-best national food holiday behind Chocolate Milkshake Day.
It’s a big day because:
It was the first time someone made a “real world” purchase using BitcoinIt’s the craziest trade ever: 2 pizzas for 10,000 BTC (worth ~$270M at today’s prices)
Here’s the story in 3 parts.
PART 1: THE DEAL
Back in 2010, a Bitcoin developer named Laszlo Hanyecz made a public offer:
He’d give anyone 10,000 Bitcoin if they brought him 2 large pizzas to his home in Florida. It could be homemade, or it could be delivered from a local pizza place.
At the time, 1 BTC = ~$0.0041. (Still worth 5 figures, but the zeroes are in the wrong place.)
So 10,000 BTC = ~$41.
But nobody took him up on the offer… *crickets*… until…
PART 2: THE CONTENDER
A broke 19-year-old college student from California stepped up to the occasion.
Meet Jeremy Sturdivant.
Jeremy did what any broke college student would do: find a way to make it happen.
(Remember, $41 = 41 cups of noodles – food for a whole month in college!)
So Jeremy hit up the local Papa Johns in Florida to order 2 large pizzas and have them delivered to Laszlo.
PART 3: THE DELIVERY
On May 22, 2010, Laszlo finally got his pizza.
The craziest part? This wasn’t the only Bitcoin Pizza offer Laszlo made.
In fact, he says he spent a total of ~100,000 BTC (worth ~$2.7B) just on pizza in the summer of 2010.
That’s what I call the summer diet of champions.
So in honor of Laszlo and Jeremy (legends) – we’re gonna send some people a Bitcoin pizza today.
Just look at the menu (hereOpens in a new tab.) and tweet your order to us @milkroaddailyOpens in a new tab..We’ll pick a few lucky winners.

 2011: Price Touches $1 For The First Time 

On February 9, 2011, Bitcoin’s price reached $1, according to historical data from investing.com. The trading volume that day was just 49,630; a minuscule figure compared to now. Moreover, this was the time when the whole crypto market reached $10 million market capitalisation (source: Statista). 

 2012: More Use Cases; Student Makes Bitcoin-Euro Vending Machine 

A student in Germany built the country’s first Bitcoin-Euro-based vending machine in 2012, as per an archived post by Verge. This was a significant milestone for the cryptocurrency, which was until then thought of simply as a computer novelty technology. The year witnessed a sudden and rapid jump in Bitcoin’s price and volume. The BTC price and volume doubled to $9 and 20,000, respectively. 

2013: Market Cap Touches $1 Billion For The First Time 

In 2013Bitcoin’s total supply was about 11 million while the price was range-bound with extreme volatility in the latter part of the year. In October, BTC price was $196, but shot up to $1,153 in just two months, Verge reports.  

A Bitcoin ATMA Bitcoin ATM

2014: Bitcoin Blockchain-Based Wedding Takes Place 

On August 5, 2014, a Florida-based couple had a Bitcoin blockchain-based wedding. They used 0.1 BTC to arrange their ceremony at Disneyland, Coindesk.com reported. On December 11, 2014, the world’s largest computer and related service provider, Microsoft, accepted Bitcoin as a form of payment, in association with BitPay, a crypto payment processor, Cointelegraph.com reported.  

2015: NYSE, MIT, White House Announce Bitcoin Plans  

This was the year when the vast potential of blockchain technology and Bitcoins was explored by big corporations and also eminent universities. One of the most notable announcements was made by NASDAQ when it came out with its blockchain exploration plan. In 2015, MIT’s Media Lab also launched its digital currency initiative, which was to be led by Brian Forde, a former White House Senior Advisor. Forde announced the three primary goals of the lab in a detailed post on Medium. 

2016: A Game-Changer Year   

Bitcoin’s price jumped 121 per cent from $433 to touch $959 in December 2016, according to coinmakretcap.com. The highest trading was happening in China with many Chinese buying Bitcoin to hedge against the falling Chinese currency in 2016, according to various media reports.  

2017: Ernst & Young (EY) Start Accepting Bitcoin 

One of the Big Four accounting firms, Ernst & Young (EY) started accepting Bitcoin from January 2017 for its services, according to various media reports. Meanwhile, Jamie Dimon, CEO of American multinational investment bank JPMorgan, said Bitcoin was a “fraud”. He later took it back. Bitcoin’s price touched an all-time high of $20,000 in March, according to a CNBC report.  

2018: Warren Buffett Comments On BTC  

American business magnate, investor and CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, Warren Buffett, in an interview with CNBC, said cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and others were “rat poison squared”. By that time, Bitcoin’s prices had already crossed $10,000. Buffett said in the interview that he did not have any short or long position in Bitcoins since he did not yet understand the underlying technology. Overall, Bitcoin had a rough journey that year and investors saw their wealth erode quite significantly, with many of them questioning the crypto’s future. Its value dropped by 70 per cent during the year, according to a Coindesk report. 

2019: BTC Intraday High Touches 40% 

Bitcoin’s prices touched an intraday high of 40 per cent, just after an announcement by Chinese President Xi Jinping was made public. He said that they would start exploring blockchain technology for future development in their financial system. He is reported to have said that China should “seize the opportunity offered by blockchain”.  

2020: Black Thursday for BTC  

On March 12, 2020, Bitcoin’s price crashed by more than 50 per cent to hit a year-low of $4,000. This was also the year when Covid-19-related lockdowns were imposed. Due to the sudden price drop and there being no circuit-breaker mechanism in crypto exchanges, many crypto traders hit their Stop-Loss mechanism, which dragged the price even lower. This event, which came to be known in the crypto community as ‘Black Thursday’, led to various ripple effects in other crypto tokens. The DeFi sectorOpens in a new tab., which particularly relied on BTC for powering transactions, too suffered heavy losses. 

Bitcoin

2021: A Bitcoin Year  

Bitcoin hit an all-time high of $68,789.63 on November 10. Cryptocurrencies as a whole created a lot of buzz, thanks to celebrity comments. Tesla chief Elon Musk tweeted in March that anyone could buy a Tesla car using Bitcoin. On April 14, the crypto’s price jumped reaching a high of $64,829.14. But later, on May 13, Musk tweeted that Tesla won’t accept payments in Bitcoins for its cars due to environmental concerns around the mining of the cryptocurrency. This resulted in Bitcoin crashing by nearly 50 per cent, CNBC reported.  

Acceptance, however, was growing. On June 9, 2021, the Central American country of El Salvador became the first to make Bitcoin legal tender. Although the US dollar continues to be El Salvador’s primary currency, cryptocurrencies can also be used for all financial transactions. El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele also announced that his government will build an oceanside “Bitcoin City” at the base of a volcano. 

Bitcoin got its upgrade, popularly known as Taproot, in November 2021. The upgrade assists Bitcoin blockchain to perform more complicated transactions, potentially widening the virtual currency’s use cases and making it a little more competitive with Ethereum for processing smart contracts. 

On January 4, 2022, as it turned a teenager, Bitcoin was trading at $46,546.80 at 3 pm, down 1.1 per cent in the last 24 hours. 

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Dale Calvert

Dale Calvert is a serial entreprenuer. He started his first business at age 14, a direct mail business out of his parents home. Dale has always believed that wealth is created in front of a trend. This business philosophy lead him into the cryptocurrency space in 2017, He made the decision in 2022, that the cryptocurrency space is where he will be spending the majority of his time.

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