Craig Wright Is Still Not Satoshi

The UK Court of Appeal has dismissed Craig Wright's attempt to overturn a High Court ruling that declared he is not Satoshi Nakamoto, the pseudonymous creator of Bitcoin.
This decision upholds the earlier judgment by Mr. Justice James Mellor, who found “overwhelming evidence” that Wright did not author the 2008 Bitcoin white paper and concluded that Wright had “lied to the court extensively and repeatedly” and engaged in forgery “on a grand scale.”
Wright’s Claims Rejected
Wright, an Australian computer scientist, has long claimed to be Satoshi Nakamoto, a contention that has been met with widespread skepticism within the cryptocurrency community. The High Court’s ruling not only rejected his claim but also referred Wright to the Crown Prosecution Service to consider potential perjury charges.
Source: X
The Court of Appeal’s decision effectively ends Wright’s legal avenues in the UK to assert his claim of being Bitcoin’s creator. This outcome reinforces the importance of credible evidence in establishing such significant assertions and underscores the judiciary’s role in scrutinizing claims that have far-reaching implications for the cryptocurrency industry.
As the legal battles conclude, the true identity of Satoshi Nakamoto remains one of the most enduring mysteries in the world of digital finance.
HBO’s Money Electric: The Bitcoin Mystery Fuels Speculation but Offers No Real Answers
The HBO documentary Money Electric: The Bitcoin Mystery stirred up fresh speculationin October within the Bitcoin community about the elusive identity of Satoshi Nakamoto, the pseudonymous creator of Bitcoin. For a moment, it seemed the documentary might solve the decade-old mystery once and for all.
Unveiling Nakamoto’s true identity would undoubtedly send shockwaves through the cryptocurrency world—and not necessarily in a positive way. Bitcoin’s very ethos rests on the principle that it is decentralized and untethered to the human biases that often plague traditional systems. Many believe that revealing Nakamoto’s identity could undermine this foundational concept.
Fortunately, past attempts to “doxx” Satoshi have been largely inconclusive. HBO’s latest effort, however, was marketed as the exception. Promising to deliver “compelling proof” and to settle “the world’s greatest mystery for good,” the documentary aired in the U.S. on Tuesday night. Yet, rather than providing definitive answers, it sparked controversy by suggesting Bitcoin developer Peter Todd might be Nakamoto, citing fragments of online evidence from Bitcoin’s formative years.
Peter Todd Denies Claims
Todd quickly dismissed the allegations, calling them baseless. Speaking to CoinDesk, Todd accused filmmaker Cullen Hoback—known for identifying the figure behind the QAnon conspiracy theory in a previous HBO series—of relying on “coincidence-based conspiracy thinking.”
“Of course, I’m not Satoshi,” Todd said. “It’s ironic that a director known for a QAnon documentary would resort to the same style of logic here.”
The broader Bitcoin community echoed Todd’s sentiment. On social media platform X (formerly Twitter), reactions to HBO’s claims were overwhelmingly skeptical, with many dismissing the documentary as another failed attempt at solving Bitcoin’s greatest enigma.
The Craig Wright Chapter: Another Closed Door
The documentary aired shortly after the conclusion of a high-profile UK trial involving Craig Wright, the Australian computer scientist who has long claimed to be Nakamoto. In March, Judge James Mellor of the UK High Court ruled decisively against Wright, stating he is not the author of the Bitcoin white paper or the individual behind the Satoshi Nakamoto pseudonym.
Judge Mellor’s ruling followed a month-long trial brought by the Crypto Open Patent Alliance (COPA), an organization dedicated to advancing cryptocurrency innovation and eliminating patents as barriers to progress. COPA sought to bar Wright from continuing to claim he created Bitcoin, accusing him of forging documents to support his assertions.
“The evidence is overwhelming,” Judge Mellor said, adding, “Dr. Wright is not the author of the Bitcoin white paper, not the person who operated under the pseudonym Satoshi Nakamoto from 2008 to 2011, and not the creator of the Bitcoin system.”
The verdict represents a significant win for COPA, whose members include major players such as Coinbase, Block (formerly Square), Meta, and MicroStrategy. It also bolsters the positions of Jack Dorsey and Coinbase in related cases involving Wright.
Satoshi Nakamoto: Still an Unsolved Mystery
With both Peter Todd and Craig Wright now effectively ruled out as Nakamoto, the search for Bitcoin’s enigmatic creator continues. HBO’s Money Electric: The Bitcoin Mystery may have fallen short of its lofty promises, but it reignited the debate about Satoshi’s identity and underscored the enduring allure of the mystery.
The documentary’s failure to deliver conclusive evidence serves as a reminder: Nakamoto’s anonymity is integral to Bitcoin’s decentralized nature. Perhaps the true power of Bitcoin lies not in uncovering its creator but in embracing the idea that no single individual controls its fate.
For now, the mystery of Satoshi Nakamoto remains unsolved, a cornerstone of Bitcoin’s mystique and a testament to its enduring resilience.
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