Software developer Peter Todd has emphatically stated that he is not Satoshi Nakamoto, the enigmatic figure behind Bitcoin, in a recent interview with Bloomberg. This assertion comes in response to the HBO documentary Money Electric: The Bitcoin Mystery, which suggests Todd may be linked to Nakamoto through circumstantial evidence.
Peter Todd Responds To HBO Documentary Claims
In an email to Bloomberg on Wednesday, Todd clarified, “I am not Satoshi,” directly addressing the film’s implications. The documentary, directed by Cullen Hoback, suggests that Nakamoto may have inadvertently used Todd’s Internet message board account to continue discussions started under the Nakamoto pseudonym.
However, Todd refuted this claim, pointing out that at the time of the posts, his account was named “retep,” and that users on the Bitcoin message board typically used anonymous handles.
Todd further explained that if he had mistakenly continued Nakamoto’s post under the “retep” account, he could have easily created a new account to post under his real name.
Instead, Todd disclosed that he later changed the “retep” account to reflect his actual identity. “If Cullen had actually wanted to find Satoshi, he could have easily fact-checked this,” Todd noted, suggesting that the documentary might have been more about generating buzz than uncovering the truth.
Interestingly, Todd also criticized Hoback’s approach as a “threadbare, circumstantial, coincidence-based” attempt to identify Nakamoto.
Peter Todd Expresses Safety Fears
Bloomberg discloses that the documentary’s claims have raised concerns for Todd’s safety, particularly given that wallets attributed to the real Satoshi Nakamoto are believed to hold around 1 million Bitcoin, currently valued at about $62 billion. Todd expressed his apprehension, stating:
Obviously, falsely accusing someone of having tens of billions of dollars puts them at risk from robbery and kidnappings. He’s putting my life at risk to promote his movie.
The true identity of Satoshi Nakamoto has long been a topic of speculation since Bitcoin’s inception in January 2009. Over the years, various individuals have been suggested as potential candidates for this elusive figure.
In 2014, Newsweek claimed that physicist Dorian Nakamoto was the creator, a claim he vehemently denied. Similarly, in 2015, the New York Times speculated that computer scientist Nick Szabo might be Nakamoto. Australian entrepreneur Craig Wright has also claimed to be Satoshi, although a UK judge ruled that he is not the creator of Bitcoin.
At the time of writing, the largest cryptocurrency on the market is trading at $61,000, down over 2% in the last 24 hours amid the broader market correction that has seen significant liquidity exit.
The total valuation of the crypto market currently stands at $2.088 trillion, representing an outflow of over $200 million in the last two weeks, after hitting a near two-month high of $2.29 trillion at the end of September.
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