Who Is Satoshi? Benjamin Wallace Goes Down the Rabbit Hole in New Book

Who created Bitcoin?

More than 16 years ago, on Halloween Day of 2008, an entity by the name of Satoshi Nakamoto sent out the whitepaper for a peer-to-peer electronic cash system to a cypherpunk email list. Bitcoin launched shortly thereafter; it quickly spawned a global cultural movement and a multi-trillion dollar industry.

Benjamin Wallace wrote a piece on the phenomenon for WIRED in November 2011, making him one of the very first mainstream journalists to ever cover the crypto space. Back then, nobody seemed to know Nakamotoโ€™s identity, and despite robust efforts, Wallace couldnโ€™t figure it out either.

Amusingly, the author of โ€œThe Billionaireโ€™s Vinegar: The Mystery of the Worldโ€™s Most Expensive Bottle of Wineโ€ (2009) was sucked back into the enigma in 2022 after receiving persistent emails from an ex-Tesla employee who was absolutely convinced that Elon Musk was Nakamoto all along. Wallace stays clear of that particular theory, but he lays out his own findings in โ€œThe Mysterious Mr. Nakamoto,โ€ a 342-page investigation set for release on March 18.

Read more: Marc Hochstein โ€“ Satoshi Nakamoto: The Mystery That (Probably) Will Never Be Solved

The conclusion? Well, by the end of it, Wallace is forced to admit that he failed to solve the Nakamoto riddle once again. But his obsession yielded a thoughtful survey of Bitcoinโ€™s history with a special emphasis on the cypherpunks whose ideas contributed to the cryptocurrencyโ€™s birth. โ€œThe Mysterious Mr. Nakamotoโ€ is a perfect work for crypto veterans and beginners alike who are curious to know more about Bitcoinโ€™s origins; in that respect, itโ€™s comparable to Laura Shinโ€™s โ€œThe Cryptopians: Idealism, Greed, Lies, and the Making of the First Big Cryptocurrency Crazeโ€ (2022), which focuses on Vitalik Buterin and Ethereumโ€™s early days.

Wallace shuffles through a long list of suspects throughout the book. His favourites include Hal Finney, the recipient of the first-ever bitcoin transaction; Nick Szabo, who designed a digital currency in the 1990s called โ€œbit goldโ€; Len Sassaman, one of the main developers and operators of the Mixmaster remailer; the relatively obscure cypherpunk James A. Donald; and longtime Bitcoin critic Ben Laurie.

One of the things that makes โ€œThe Mysterious Mr. Nakamotoโ€ a fun read is that you can watch Wallace slowly go insane as he bounces back and forth between these names. Each time he narrows it down to one person, a new piece of information rolls in and detonates his theory. Wallace deserves credit for his multi-faceted approach to the affair. He makes abundant use of stylometry for Nakamotoโ€™s emails and code, deeply investigates circumstantial evidence, interviews almost all of the potential candidates, and even learns to code to get a better grasp of what the cypherpunks are talking about.

Looming over the investigation, of course, is the debate over whether Satoshi Nakamotoโ€™s identity even matters in the first place. There has been renewed interest in the question lately, between HBOโ€™s โ€œMoney Electric: The Bitcoin Mysteryโ€ documentary (which came out last fall) and VanEckโ€™s head of digital assets Matthew Sigel stating in February that he believed Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey created Bitcoin.

As Wallace notes, Nakamotoโ€™s identity is one of the great secrets of the 21st century. With Wall Street and the White House beginning to fully embrace the crypto sector, there is perhaps a feeling that putting a face on Bitcoinโ€™s inventor is necessary to make the digital asset a little cleaner and safer to integrate into the global financial system.

Nakamotoโ€™s identity is crucial because its discovery would impact the way people see Bitcoin, Wallace argues. Crypto folks, he says, prefer to think of Satoshi as a kind of promethean figure that unleashed Bitcoin as a gift to mankind before disappearing for the greater good. But what if Nakamoto was an outright criminal like former cartel boss Paul Le Roux who simply cannot access his private keys because heโ€™s behind bars? Would BlackRock and Fidelity still race to recommend exposure to the cryptocurrency to their clients?

Wallace eventually sort of settles on the idea that Hal Finney probably took part in Bitcoinโ€™s creation, but that he likely wasnโ€™t working alone, and that in any case any theory is almost impossible to verify without Nakamoto providing irrevocable proof. But โ€œThe Mysterious Mr. Nakamotoโ€ is crafted intelligently and the lack of resolution does not feel anti-climactic. At the end of the day, itโ€™s all about the chase.

โ€œWhat could we possibly learn from Nakomotoโ€™s biography?โ€ Wallace muses at some point, after a friend of his suggests the story would be better without an answer. โ€œThat he was a random professor whoโ€™d had a lucky brainstorm? No, what was most interesting about Nakamoto was his absence. He was defined by what we didnโ€™t know about him.โ€



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