On Feb. 23, Bitcoin historian and journalist Pete Rizzo shared five emails from 2008 and 2009 between cryptographer Adam Back and BTC creator Satoshi Nakamoto.
The first one from August 2008 is a discussion on Bitcoin four months before its official launch.
“I’m getting ready to release a paper,” wrote the elusive Satoshi, who referenced Back’s early attempt at creating digital money called HashCash.
Back responds, suggesting that Satoshi investigates a paper called “B-money” by Wei Dei.
Satoshi replied, admitting they’d never read the “B-money” paper, but their ideas “start from exactly that point,” they said before explaining:
A day after first emailing Satoshi, Adam writes back, apologizing for not reading the paper before directing Satoshi to another paper called “Micromint.”
The final email in January 2009 was Satoshi thanking Adam again and letting him know about Bitcoin’s formal software release as v0.1.
It was also observed that Satoshi mentioned “We” in his emails. “We propose a solution to the double-spending problem using a peer-to-peer network,” they wrote.
So the plot thickens, was Satoshi a lone wolf, or was Bitcoin created by a team of people? It also eliminates the theory that Adam Back is Satoshi Nakamoto.
Satoshi also used two different email providers and addresses in his communications. One was anonymousspeech.com, which is now parked at GoDaddy, and the other was vistomail.com, also domain parked at GoDaddy.
Fourteen years on, Bitcoin was trading at $51,000 during the Friday morning Asian trading session following a 1.2% decline on the day.
It has held above $50,000 for ten days, but analysts have predicted that markets will correct after several weeks of solid gains.
The post Unseen Satoshi Nakamoto Emails Revealed, What Do They Tell Us? appeared first on CryptoPotato.
The first one from August 2008 is a discussion on Bitcoin four months before its official launch.
“I’m getting ready to release a paper,” wrote the elusive Satoshi, who referenced Back’s early attempt at creating digital money called HashCash.
Satoshi Sought Bitcoin Inspiration
Back responds, suggesting that Satoshi investigates a paper called “B-money” by Wei Dei.
“Dei was a well-known cryptographer working on digital cash and is a frequently cited candidate for Satoshi,” explained Rizzo.
NEW: Adam Back’s complete email history with Satoshi Nakamato was entered in the court records today
Email #1: Adam and Satoshi discuss #Bitcoin 4 months before its official launch pic.twitter.com/HwxnWsbYwI
— Rizzo (@pete_rizzo_) February 22, 2024
Satoshi replied, admitting they’d never read the “B-money” paper, but their ideas “start from exactly that point,” they said before explaining:
“The main thing my system [Bitcoin] adds is to also use proof-of-work to support a distributed timestamp server.”
A day after first emailing Satoshi, Adam writes back, apologizing for not reading the paper before directing Satoshi to another paper called “Micromint.”
The final email in January 2009 was Satoshi thanking Adam again and letting him know about Bitcoin’s formal software release as v0.1.
“The main idea of the system is the generation of a chain of hash-based proof of work to create self-evident proof of the majority consensus. Users get new coins by contributing proof of work to the chain.”
It was also observed that Satoshi mentioned “We” in his emails. “We propose a solution to the double-spending problem using a peer-to-peer network,” they wrote.
So the plot thickens, was Satoshi a lone wolf, or was Bitcoin created by a team of people? It also eliminates the theory that Adam Back is Satoshi Nakamoto.
Satoshi also used two different email providers and addresses in his communications. One was anonymousspeech.com, which is now parked at GoDaddy, and the other was vistomail.com, also domain parked at GoDaddy.
Bitcoin Market Outlook
Fourteen years on, Bitcoin was trading at $51,000 during the Friday morning Asian trading session following a 1.2% decline on the day.
It has held above $50,000 for ten days, but analysts have predicted that markets will correct after several weeks of solid gains.
The post Unseen Satoshi Nakamoto Emails Revealed, What Do They Tell Us? appeared first on CryptoPotato.