Has the True Identity of the Bitcoin Founder Finally Been Revealed?The latest name to float to the surface in the hunt for Satoshi Nakamoto is Craig Steven Wright, an Australian entrepreneur and academic.
ByNina Zipkin•
Who created Bitcoin?
The question of who exactly is behind the curtain -- known only as Satoshi Nakamoto -- has been of interest to fans, critics and law enforcement alike sinceBitcoin first emerged in 2009.
现在,似乎有另一个anony铅mous founder. This week,WiredandGizmodopublished pieces detailing their investigations into an Australian entrepreneur and academic named Craig Steven Wright, to see if he was indeed Nakamoto.
Related:What Needs to Happen for Bitcoin to Go Mainstream
Laying out an array of documents that included leaked emails, legal transcripts and deleted blog and social-media posts from Wright,Wired'sultimate conclusionwas that "despite a massive trove of evidence, we still can't say with absolute certainty that the mystery is solved. But two possibilities outweigh all others: Either Wright invented Bitcoin, or he's a brilliant hoaxer who very badly wants us to believe he did."
OnGizmodo, reporters Sam Biddle and Andy Cushwrite of their inquiry into Wright and Dave Kleiman, a computer forensics expert who died in 2013, that they "obtained confirmation from on-the-record sources that Wright claimed on at least two occasions that he and Kleiman were both involved in the creation of Bitcoin."
The same day thatWiredandGizmodopublished their findings, Wright's home in Sydney was raided by the Australian Federal Police.The AFP toldThe Guardianthat the raid was not related to the reports about Wright and Bitcoin and that the search warrants were issued by the Australian Taxation Office.
Related:What Is the Future of Bitcoin?
This is not the first time the search for the real Satoshi Nakamoto has been in the news, with investigations from theNew York Times,Fast Company, and theNew Yorker. But the biggest fuss came in March of last year, whenNewsweekpublished a cover story titled"The Face Behind Bitcoin."In it they identified 64-year-old Dorian Satoshi Nakamoto, a Japanese-American programmer and engineer from California, as the possible inventor of the cryptocurrency
Nakamoto vehemently denied any involvement with Bitcoin in a letter provided by Nakamoto's lawyer Ethan Kirschner to Felix Salmon, then a financial blogger atReuters. In the statement,which Salmon posted on Twitter, Nakamoto wrote, "I did not create, invent or otherwise work on Bitcoin. I unconditionally deny the Newsweek report."
With analysts predicting that Bitcoin users worldwidewill grow to nearly 5 million by 2019, it's likely the fascination with Nakamoto's identity won't subside anytime soon.
Related:'I Did Not Create Bitcoin': 4 Major Takeaways From Dorian Satoshi Nakamoto's Letter of Denial