The true identification of Satoshi Nakamoto, the pseudonym of Bitcoin’s founder, has remained a thriller for a few years. Nevertheless, new analysis revealed within the New York Occasions means that Satoshi could also be Adam Again, a British cryptologist who did a few of the earliest and most influential work on digital property. Buck denies that he’s Satoshi.
Individuals have been attempting to trace down the daddy of Bitcoin for many years with out a lot success. Based mostly on Buck’s denials, it is not clear whether or not Occasions expertise journalist John Carreyrou, recognized for his protection of defeating Theranos, has come a lot additional than anybody else.
It suits the profile of the one that would possible create the primary cryptocurrency. He created Hashcash, the proof-of-work system that Satoshi used to mine Bitcoin, and at present serves as co-founder and CEO of Blockstream, an organization that builds the infrastructure for blockchain-based fee techniques. Mr. Buck even agrees that Mr. Carreyrou is an inexpensive suspect, and it’s possible that Mr. Satoshi is a 50-year-old British cypherpunk like himself. (In that case, sure, the usage of Japanese nicknames is unusual.)
Nevertheless, Carry Lou would not have any simple proof to shut the case.
To stake my declare, I collected an archive of emails despatched on three crypto record servers between 1992 and 2008, throughout a interval when the pseudonym Satoshi was lively on these boards. Carreyrou fed the archive into an AI that recognized similarities between the writing types of Satoshi and different lively contributors. For instance, Satoshi did not hyphen compound nouns and typically confused “it” with “it is.”
Again had the most effective match, however wrote to X that the proof was “a mixture of probability and comparable phrases from individuals with comparable experiences and pursuits.”
Satoshi’s case remains to be unsolved, however I’ve to confess that Carry Lou’s use of AI was very intelligent.
tech crunch occasion
San Francisco, California
|
October 13-15, 2026

