Skip to main content

Satoshi Nakamoto | Wiki | Mapping Bitcoin

Satoshi Nakamoto

Pseudonymous creator of Bitcoin who published the whitepaper in 2008 and launched the network in 2009.

2008

Satoshi Nakamoto is the pseudonymous person or group of people who created Bitcoin. Nakamoto authored the Bitcoin whitepaper, deployed the first Bitcoin software, mined the genesis block, and then gradually withdrew from the project, leaving behind a technology that would reshape global finance.

The Whitepaper and Launch

On October 31, 2008, Nakamoto published "Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System" to the Cryptography Mailing List. The nine-page document outlined a system for digital payments that required no trusted third party -- no bank, no payment processor, no government -- to function. It solved the double-spending problem that had stymied previous attempts at digital cash by introducing a distributed ledger secured by proof-of-work.

On January 3, 2009, Nakamoto mined the Bitcoin genesis block, embedding a newspaper headline in the coinbase transaction: "The Times 03/Jan/2009 Chancellor on brink of second bailout for banks." This timestamp, and the message it carried, situated Bitcoin's birth in the context of the 2008 financial crisis and hinted at its creator's motivations.

Early Development

Nakamoto corresponded extensively with early contributors through email and the Bitcointalk forum, refining the protocol and debugging the software. The first person to receive a Bitcoin transaction was Hal Finney, a cryptographer who received 10 BTC from Nakamoto on January 12, 2009.

Over the following two years, Nakamoto worked alongside a small community of developers, answering technical questions, addressing bugs, and gradually introducing others -- particularly Gavin Andresen -- to the project's codebase and direction. Nakamoto's forum posts and emails from this period reveal a careful, methodical thinker who had considered many of Bitcoin's potential challenges years before they arose.

Disappearance

In April 2011, Nakamoto sent a final email to Bitcoin developer Mike Hearn, stating: "I've moved on to other things. It's in good hands with Gavin and everyone." After that, Nakamoto ceased all known communication.

Nakamoto's estimated holdings of approximately one million bitcoin -- accumulated from early mining -- have never moved from their original addresses. This restraint has been interpreted as either a principled commitment to non-interference or as evidence of loss of access to the keys. As of 2025, those holdings are worth tens of billions of dollars.

Identity Theories

Nakamoto's true identity remains unknown. Over the years, journalists and researchers have proposed numerous candidates, including Hal Finney, Nick Szabo, Adam Back, and Len Sassaman. Australian computer scientist Craig Wright claimed to be Nakamoto, but failed to provide cryptographic proof and lost a 2024 UK court case in which the judge ruled definitively that Wright is not Satoshi Nakamoto.

The question of Nakamoto's identity has been explored in several books, most notably Nathaniel Popper's Digital Gold, which reconstructs Bitcoin's early history through extensive interviews with those who interacted with Nakamoto.

Legacy

Satoshi Nakamoto's disappearance was, in an important sense, Bitcoin's most consequential design decision. By stepping away, Nakamoto ensured there was no founder to arrest, no central authority to pressure, and no single human whose death or compromise could end the project. The mystery of Nakamoto's identity has become part of Bitcoin's cultural identity, a founding myth for the digital age.

The Satoshi Nakamoto Institute preserves Nakamoto's known writings, including all forum posts, emails, and the original whitepaper.

References

Referenced by

Bitcoin CoreFounder

The reference implementation of the Bitcoin protocol, maintained by a global community of open-source developers.

Hal FinneyRelated

Pioneering cryptographer and cypherpunk who received the first-ever Bitcoin transaction from Satoshi Nakamoto in 2009. Early developer of PGP and RPOW.

Gavin AndresenRelated

Early Bitcoin developer chosen by Satoshi Nakamoto to lead Bitcoin Core development, founding member of the Bitcoin Foundation.

Eric VoskuilRelated

Bitcoin developer, author of Cryptoeconomics, and lead developer of Libbitcoin, an alternative full-node implementation focused on cryptoeconomic principles.

Laszlo HanyeczRelated

Early Bitcoin developer and pioneer who made the first real-world Bitcoin purchase (10,000 BTC for two pizzas on May 22, 2010), created the first MacOS Bitcoin client, and pioneered GPU mining.

Nick SzaboRelated

Cryptographer, computer scientist, and legal scholar who coined the term "smart contracts" in 1994 and designed Bit Gold in 1998, a direct precursor to Bitcoin's architecture.

Wei DaiRelated

Cryptographer, cypherpunk, and creator of b-money (1998), one of the earliest proposals for a decentralized digital currency and the first reference cited in the Bitcoin whitepaper. Also created the Crypto++ cryptographic library.

David ChaumRelated

Cryptographer and inventor of blind signatures and digital cash (DigiCash/eCash), whose work in the 1980s and 1990s laid the intellectual foundation for Bitcoin and the cypherpunk movement.

Michael SaylorRelated

Co-founder and Executive Chairman of Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy), who transformed the company into the world's largest corporate Bitcoin holder and pioneered the corporate Bitcoin treasury model.

Ross William UlbrichtRelated

Creator of Silk Road, the first modern darknet marketplace, which pioneered Bitcoin as a medium of exchange. Sentenced to life in prison in 2015 and pardoned by President Trump in January 2025.

Stefan ThomasRelated

German software developer who created the viral "What is Bitcoin?" video and BitcoinJS, served as CTO of Ripple, co-created the Interledger Protocol, and is known for losing the password to an IronKey containing 7,002 BTC.

Peter ToddRelated

Bitcoin Core developer, applied cryptography consultant, and creator of OpenTimestamps. Author of BIP 65 (OP_CHECKLOCKTIMEVERIFY) and BIP 125 (Replace-by-Fee), key figure in the Blocksize War, and subject of HBO's 2024 documentary "Money Electric" which controversially named him as a Satoshi Nakamoto candidate.

Eric HughesRelated

Mathematician, co-founder of the cypherpunks mailing list, and author of "A Cypherpunk's Manifesto" (1993). A foundational figure in the privacy and cryptography movement that laid the intellectual groundwork for Bitcoin.

The Bitcoin StandardAbout

Seminal book by Saifedean Ammous analyzing Bitcoin through the lens of Austrian economics and monetary history.

Bitcoin WhitepaperAuthor

The foundational nine-page paper by Satoshi Nakamoto that introduced Bitcoin as a peer-to-peer electronic cash system.

Digital GoldAbout

Nathaniel Popper's narrative history of Bitcoin, tracing it from cypherpunk origins through its first major boom via the key figures who built it.

Bit GoldRelated

Nick Szabo's 1998 proposal for a decentralized digital currency using proof-of-work and cryptographic chains, widely regarded as the most direct precursor to Bitcoin.

b-moneyRelated

Wei Dai's 1998 proposal for an anonymous, distributed electronic cash system, the first reference cited in the Bitcoin whitepaper and one of the earliest designs for decentralized digital currency.