Intriguingly, as the date for the airing of the documentary has drawn near, a number of high-value wallets from the “Satoshi era” have become active for the first time since 2009.

  • @TropicalDingdong
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    1249 minutes ago

    They don’t know. and the documentary will be bigfoot level speculation.

  • @expatriado
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    555 hours ago

    extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence

    • @yesman
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      120 minutes ago

      Where is the extraordinary claim? Pigs have been unmasking bitcoin owners for years. And the tools they use wouldn’t be out of reach for an amateur detective or journalist.

      There are laws and regulations to keep people out of your Visa statement, but the bitcoin ledger is pubic for anybody who cares to look.

    • @dhork
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      5 hours ago

      Not really, all it requires is someone to produce a signed message with one of Satoshi’s private keys, which can be easily verified with the public addresses on the blockchain. Whoever produced that message can be proven to possess that private key. Nothing short of that would be believable by the crypto nerds.

      If we presume that Satoshi understood that Bitcoin may be valuable one day and kept the keys private, that would mean that the signer really is Satoshi, or one of his associates or heirs Satoshi trusted wih access. Even if that person wasn’t actually Satoshi, their word on who it is would be considered authoritative.

      Unless it’s Craig. Fuck that guy. Nobody believes him.

      • jungle
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        172 hours ago

        That is the extraordinary evidence being referenced.