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Been following this whole Satoshi identity debate for years, and Adam Back's latest comments on the New York Times investigation are actually worth paying attention to. The Blockstream CEO keeps getting dragged into the conversation, but his response this time goes deeper than just another 'no, that's not me.'
Here's what makes this interesting. Back's got a detail in his history that he literally cannot escape - he was the first person Satoshi ever emailed. August 2008, before the Bitcoin whitepaper even dropped. That's a fact that will always hang over him, which is probably why the conspiracy theories keep resurfacing.
But his actual take on the whole thing is more compelling than his denial. Back's arguing that Satoshi is probably someone nobody knows at all. Think about it - if this person was already established in crypto or cryptography circles, they'd have been identified by now. Fifteen years of deep analysis from some seriously technical researchers, and nothing concrete. The trail just goes cold in 2011.
He made this same point to the HBO documentary team that dug into the mystery. His logic is straightforward: a known figure would have been found already. Someone who actually wanted to stay anonymous wouldn't be talking to journalists or showing up at conferences under their real name. That's just basic operational security.
The emails Back received from Satoshi are now part of the court record from the Craig Wright trial - you know, that Australian guy who spent years falsely claiming to be Satoshi before getting legally shut down. So there's documentation, but it doesn't really move the needle on identifying who Satoshi actually is.
Back's conclusion feels realistic: we probably won't ever know who created Bitcoin at this point. The digital breadcrumbs disappeared over a decade ago. Unless something dramatically changes, this mystery might just stay unsolved. Which is kind of fitting for the creator of the world's most important open-source project.