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Many people have misconceptions about the founder and development team of Bitcoin. In fact, there are two key points worth clarifying.
**The First Key: Why Satoshi Nakamoto Chose to Retire**
After creating Bitcoin in 2009 and releasing the white paper, Satoshi gradually faded from the community's view by the end of 2010. In April 2011, he sent his last email and has not appeared publicly since.
Many see this as an accident or regret, but in reality, this is one of the smartest aspects of Bitcoin's design. Satoshi's "disappearance" is precisely the key to Bitcoin's success.
Why? Because decentralization is not just empty talk. If a system still relies on a genius figure to guide direction, make decisions, and solve problems, it is essentially centralized. Satoshi's disappearance forcibly broke this dependency—forcing the community to learn how to operate and evolve without a "leader" or "CEO."
More importantly, without a specific founder, governments and institutions find it difficult to pressure or destroy the network by targeting individuals. The authority of the entire system comes from the code itself and the consensus mechanism running on all network nodes, not from any one person.
**The Second Key: The True Face of the Bitcoin Core Team**
Many believe there is an "official development team" like a company controlling everything about Bitcoin. This perception is actually far from the truth.
Bitcoin Core is the main client implementation of Bitcoin, and indeed there is a group of core developers maintaining the code. But this does not mean they "control" Bitcoin. All changes must ultimately be validated through consensus among network nodes—if the majority of nodes disagree with an update, that update cannot go through.
This is the true meaning of decentralization: power is distributed, and no single group can act unilaterally.