Nic Carter doubles down on theory Bitcoin was invented by NSA

Bitcoin advocate Nic Carter has come out to reiterate his support for the theory that the United States National Security Agency (NSA) had something to do with the creation of Bitcoin (BTC).

On Sept. 15, Iris Energy co-founder Daniel Roberts seemingly revived the decade-old theory on X after posting screenshots of a 1996 paper titled: โ€œHow to make a mint: The cryptography of anonymous electronic cash.โ€

The paper is one of the first known discussions of a Bitcoin-like system, which proposes usingย public-key cryptography to allow users to make anonymous payments without revealing their identity.

The footer notes show the research paper was โ€œprepared by NSA employees.โ€ Sources included cryptography expert Tatsuaki Okamoto who co-invented the Okamotoโ€“Uchiyama public key cryptosystem in 1998.

On Sept. 21, Carter โ€” a partner of Castle Island Ventures partner doubled down his support for the notion stating โ€œI actually do believe this,โ€ before adding:

โ€œI call it the Bitcoin lab leak hypothesis. I think it was a shuttered internal R&D project which one researcher thought was too good to lay fallow on the shelf and chose to secretly release.โ€

Carter has actually held the theory for several years, proposingย back inย 2020: โ€œIf Bitcoin was written by NSA cryptographers as a monetary bioweapon, if you will, and the code escaped those sensitive confines… does that make it a virus… that escaped from a lab?โ€

In 2021, he stated: โ€œThe only decent thing the NSA ever did from the world was let Bitcoin leak from the lab.”

However, he went on to say that this doesnโ€™t imply the U.S. government secretly controls all the Satoshi coins, another theory that often piggybacks on the Bitcoin / NSA conspiracy theory which suggests the NSA created a backdoor to the Bitcoin code.

โ€œIn my version of this made-up idea, the researcher did it without permission of the NSA, and chose to leave the coins behind so as to preserve his anonymity.โ€

โ€œThereโ€™s a ton of other circumstantial evidence which supports this [theory],โ€ he added.

Meanwhile, some users drew attention to one of the cryptography academics Tatsuaki Okamoto listed in the 1996 paper, suggesting the name sounds very similar to Satoshi Nakamoto, the pseudonymous creator of Bitcoin.

โ€œThe name could have been used as inspiration for satoshi. Thatโ€™s not really a critical part of the theory though,โ€ Carter said.

Related: This is how Satoshi Nakamoto envisioned crypto working

Meanwhile, director of Intelligence at cyber security firm Krebs Stamos, Matthew Pines, believesย it was most likely a โ€œcross-fertilization of NSA crypto nerds and cipher punk nerds,โ€ adding:

โ€œI suspect Satoshi (or at least his/their close intellectual collaborators) has close NSA work associationsโ€”but I donโ€™t think Bitcoin itself or the white paper were officially sanctioned.โ€

Former Goldman Sachs executive Raoul Pal has previously shared his own theory. In an interview with Impact Theory earlier this year he said:

โ€œI think the US government and the UK government invented it … which is the NSA and the GCHQ in the UK, who are the two world centers of cryptography,โ€

Cointelegraphโ€™s deep dive into the conspiracy theory in August interviewed former NSA cryptanalyst Jeff Man, who said that while it was โ€œfeasibleโ€ that the NSA could have created Bitcoin as a means to gather intelligence about its enemies, it is highly doubtful.

However, Man concluded that even if they did, it is likely weโ€™ll never find out the real story behind the worldโ€™s most popular digital asset until it doesn’t matter anymore.

Magazine: Big Questions: Did the NSA create Bitcoin?