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August 19, 2019

Self-Professed Satoshi Nakamoto Publishes Part 1 of ‘My Reveal’

By Daily Hodl Staff

A man claiming to be the anonymous creator of Bitcoin has published the first article in a three-part series that will supposedly unveil the identity of the cryptocurrency mastermind known as Satoshi Nakamoto.

In part one of “My Reveal”, the self-professed Satoshi says he grew up in Pakistan, and his father worked at United Bank Limited, a Pakistani multinational bank based in Karachi.

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“Nakamoto” says he was deeply affected when the UK’s central bank shut down Pakistan’s scandal-ridden Bank of Credit and Commerce International (BCCI) in 1991, as well as the global financial collapse and great recession that began in 2008.

“On a personal level, when I visited the UK in 2005, no bank would open its doors for me to give me access to a bank account because I didn’t have a permanent UK address. Without a bank account, I had no access to online facilities, and I didn’t know how to overcome this obstacle…

I felt like a failure and was humiliated by the banks so I made it my mission to invent something that would enable a common layperson to access money without involving the big banks. I wanted to empower the poor person, empower the little man, and create something that was accessible as the people’s money – the people’s bank with no boundaries, no nationalities, and no discrimination – where nothing was controlled by the government and where no one dictated and destroyed people for the sake of misplaced politics.

Even a poor kid with limited education could potentially reap the benefits from Bitcoin whilst sitting in China, India or Africa. I was driven to create something that would change finance and the banking world forever and would give people the power, taking away the central banks’ control.”

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After studying cryptography, “Nakamoto” says he began to build Bitcoin with Hal Finney in 2006. Finney, a computer scientist who passed away in 2014, is well known for working with Satoshi and famously proclaimed he had successfully started running a Bitcoin node back in 2009.

In the post, “Nakamoto” also publishes images of a computer he claims to have used to mine Bitcoin back in the early days. The computer is a Fujitsu Lifebook laptop, model Fpc04041b.

 

Source: Satoshinrh

The post concludes by thanking Finney for his contributions to Bitcoin, and promises to reveal the name and identity of Nakamoto on August 20th.

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“Hal knew from day one that I was neither a cypherpunk nor a hard-core techie, but he always said that he liked my sincerity and smartness in things that no one else could envision. He liked when I talked about signs in people and he mentioned that in his last post on the 19th of March 2013 on Bitcointalk.

‘Today, Satoshi’s true identity has become a mystery,’ he said. ‘But at the time, I thought I was dealing with a young man of Japanese ancestry who was very smart and sincere. I’ve had the good fortune to know many brilliant people over the course of my life, so I recognize the signs.’

I think he used this post as a way to communicate with me, as he knew all my emails had been hacked. Unfortunately, by the time I looked at the post in 2015, he was gone forever.”

The digital marketing agency Ivy McLemore & Associates published the piece and claims it’s a transcription of Nakamoto’s words. The New York-based agency has strongly denied the notion that the series is an elaborate PR stunt.

The real Satoshi can prove his identity by signing a message with the address from the very first Bitcoin block. Until then, crypto leaders like Litecoin’s Charlie Lee say they’re taking the new posts from the self-professed Bitcoin creator with a giant grain of salt.

You can check out the full post here.

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