Adam Back Challenges the Biggest Claim About Satoshi’s Bitcoin Holdings

Adam Back, inventor of Hashcash and a pioneering figure in Bitcoin’s early development, has dismantled the new Satoshi Nakamoto documentary by challenging its core technical assumptions about Bitcoin mining patterns and coin ownership.

Back’s detailed response on X points to critical flaws in how the documentary interprets early mining data and the so-called Patoshi pattern used to estimate Satoshi’s holdings.

The Patoshi Pattern Problem

The documentary relies heavily on the Patoshi pattern, a statistical analysis of Bitcoin block timestamps that researchers claim can identify blocks mined by Satoshi. The analysis suggests Satoshi controlled 500,000 to 1 million Bitcoin by mining roughly 20-40% of blocks in Bitcoin’s first year.

Back argues that this analysis is fundamentally unreliable.

“Clearly there were many other miners (60-80% of hashrate or more even in the first year),” Back wrote.

As the Bitcoin network grew and more participants joined, the pattern became increasingly ambiguous and impossible to verify with certainty.

It has been suggested that as miner participation increased over time, attribution became increasingly unclear, with the Patoshi pattern potentially blending into background noise. This implies the documentary may overstate how precisely early mining activity can be linked to specific actors.

The Flawed “Never Sold” Assumption About Satoshi

The documentary’s central claim rests on the assumption that Satoshi never sold a single Bitcoin, which they argue proves the creator is dead.

This narrative hinges on the belief that a living Satoshi would have spent or sold coins given the extraordinary price appreciation from $0 to $100,000 per Bitcoin.

Back challenges this logic directly. He questions whether the Patoshi pattern can actually prove that Satoshi holds all those coins unsold. Even if the pattern correctly identifies Satoshi’s early mining, it does not prove that those specific coins remain untouched.

“If Satoshi sold any, he could have sold from more recent, more ambiguous coins first,” Back argued.

In other words, Satoshi could have strategically liquidated coins from the ambiguous later mining period when the Patoshi pattern becomes unreliable, and attribution becomes impossible.

Timeline Inconsistencies and Technical Flaws

Back also flagged the documentary’s sloppy handling of timeline evidence. He referenced earlier work by Jameson Lopp showing that Hal Finney was running a marathon at the exact moment Satoshi was sending test transactions on the Bitcoin network, a direct contradiction that disqualifies Finney from the theory.

Back described the documentary’s approach as suffering from “Gell-Mann amnesia,” a term referring to the tendency to dismiss contradictory evidence that emerges after an initial theory is proposed. When the Finney timeline objection was raised, the filmmakers simply shifted their claim to include Len Sassaman without addressing why their original evidence failed.

Additionally, the documentary dismisses EU timezone residents based on forum post analysis, then later pivots to naming Sassaman despite these timezone inconsistencies, Back noted.

This pattern suggests the documentary started with a conclusion. It then worked backward to find supporting evidence rather than following evidence to a conclusion.

The C++ and Windows Problems

Back also highlighted the devastating objection raised by Cam and Len Sassaman’s widow. Sassaman did not know C++ and had never owned a Windows machine. Bitcoin’s original code is written in C++, creating a critical technical barrier.

Additionally, Sassaman was a vocal Bitcoin critic during his lifetime, making his secret role as co-creator highly implausible.

What This Means for the Satoshi Mystery

Back’s analysis does not definitively solve the Satoshi mystery, but it does demolish the documentary’s theory piece by piece. His core argument is that early Bitcoin mining data is too ambiguous. The “never sold coins” assumption is unfounded. It cannot support firm conclusions about Satoshi’s identity.

The debate reveals how difficult it is to prove Satoshi’s identity solely through technical forensics. Even the most sophisticated pattern analysis loses precision over time as the number of network participants grows and mining becomes more distributed.

Other candidates, like Nick Szabo, gained renewed discussion following the documentary’s failure. Some researchers suggest the mystery may never be solved unless Satoshi voluntarily reveals themselves or new evidence surfaces.

The post Adam Back Challenges the Biggest Claim About Satoshi’s Bitcoin Holdings appeared first on BeInCrypto.

read the full story

Bitcoin Price Advances Toward $80K, Upside Break Now In Focus

Bitcoin price started a fresh increase and cleared the $78,500 zone. BTC is consolidating and might…

TRM Labs Highligihts Rise of Stablecoins in Venezuela

TRM Labs’ latest report on global cryptocurrency adoption stressed that stablecoins are being used…

BTC Eyes $80K as Negative Funding Rates Set Up Short Squeeze

Bitcoin sits at $78,000. The move higher has been pretty steady through late April, grinding through…

Bitcoin to $10 Million? | The $1 Quadrillion Market Bitcoin Is About To Devour!

Bitcoin is not just another asset, it is competing for a $1 quadrillion global settlement market.…

Bitcoin Sees Renewed Demand From US Institutional Players — What’s Changing?

According to an on-chain analyst, Bitcoin has been witnessing a shift in investor behavior in one of…

Crypto Holders Slash Personal Spending as BTC and ETH Prices Tank

Crypto investors are cutting back. Hard. A new survey from CEX.IO shows a growing number of people…

'Historical average' could push Bitcoin bottom at $57K level: Analyst

Bitcoin was “rejected” from the $80,000 price level, which is its next resistance zone on the…

Bitcoin Price Prediction: What Is BTC’s Most Likely Move in the Next Few Days

Bitcoin is trading at $78k, closing out the final week of April with a quiet but persistent grind…

Stablecoin Market Sheds $892M as KelpDAO Breach Triggers DeFi Unwind

The stablecoin market has kept a muted tone in the wake of the recent KelpDAO breach, with $892…

Strategy's Michael Saylor again hints at impending BTC purchase

The biggest Bitcoin treasury company's data shows holdings are profitable, having gained about 3.3%…

ETH Builds Wall Street Base While BTC Captures Bulk of ETF Money

Bitcoin’s pulling in the big dollars. Institutional money keeps flooding into Bitcoin ETFs,…

MicroStrategy’s Bitcoin Holdings Hit $63.46 Billion Record

Strategy’s Bitcoin (BTC) treasury climbed to a record $63.46 billion as of April 26, with the…

Bitcoin Community Questions US Military’s Role In The Network

Iran’s decision to accept Bitcoin as payment for oil shipping tolls through the Strait of…

Bitcoin leads ETF flows, but Ethereum builds institutional base for Q2 showdown

Is Ethereum quietly entering its Wall Street phase despite Bitcoin's capital lead?

US Treasury Adds Venmo for Debt Donations as Strategic Bitcoin Reserve Bill Stalls

US Treasury now accepts Venmo donations toward the $39T debt as the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve bill…

Bitcoin Derivatives Buying Pressure Continues To Rise — Is $80K Inevitable?

The price of Bitcoin has been enjoying significant bullish momentum over the past few weeks, with…