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Author: Admin | 2025-04-27
One of the early co-developers of Bitcoin, Martti Malmi, randomly tweeted a link containing the text of emails between himself and Bitcoin creator Satoshi Nakamoto. Satoshi's exchanges with a Finnish software engineer comprised 70,000 words worth of emails. Shutterstock Posted February 23, 2024 at 5:45 pm EST. On Thursday, Finnish software engineer Martti Malmi, a co-architect of Bitcoin in its first two years, published a mysteriously succinct message on X (formerly Twitter): “My email correspondence with Satoshi in 2009-2011: mmalmi.github.io/satoshi.” The link led to a 70,000-word document on Github containing emails exchanged between him and—he claims—Satoshi Nakamoto, the pseudonymous founder of Bitcoin, whose real identity is still unknown. My email correspondence with Satoshi in 2009-2011: https://t.co/jyoX8gXckp— Martti Malmi (@marttimalmi) February 23, 2024The simplicity of the post’s language belied the significance of the data drop. There are very few publicly-known samples of communications from Satoshi aside from the original Bitcoin Whitepaper, published in 2008. And Malmi is one of the few verifiable parties involved in the creation of the first cryptocurrency.In his introductory text preceding the emails, Malmi explains why he has chosen to publicize these now, some 13-15 years later after they were sent: “I did not feel comfortable sharing private correspondence earlier, but decided to do so for an important trial in the UK in 2024 where I was a witness. Also, a long time has passed now since the emails were sent.” The trial Malmi was referring to was the one between the Crypto Open Patent Alliance (COPA) and Craig Wright, in which Wright claims to be Satoshi. Read more: A History of Bitcoin: How the World’s First Digital Asset Went From Obscurity to FamePrescient SatoshiSome of the findings demonstrate Satoshi’s prescience, seemingly predicting the recent controversies surrounding cryptocurrency. Highlights include: 1. Satoshi on regulatory stickiness “I’m uncomfortable with explicitly saying, ‘consider it an investment’… That’s a dangerous thing to say and you should delete that bullet point. It’s OK if they come to that conclusion on their own, but we can’t pitch it as that.”2. Satoshi on crypto mining“If it did grow to consume significant energy…The cost
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