LEN

Lennar Corp Price

LEN
$0
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*Data last updated: 2026-05-19 08:34 (UTC+8)

As of 2026-05-19 08:34, Lennar Corp (LEN) is priced at $0, with a total market cap of --, a P/E ratio of 0.00, and a dividend yield of 0.00%. Today, the stock price fluctuated between $0 and $0. The current price is 0.00% above the day's low and 0.00% below the day's high, with a trading volume of --. Over the past 52 weeks, LEN has traded between $0 to $0, and the current price is 0.00% away from the 52-week high.

LEN Key Stats

P/E Ratio0.00
Dividend Yield (TTM)0.00%
Shares Outstanding0.00

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Hot Posts About Lennar Corp (LEN)

User_any

User_any

23 minutes ago
Gate CFD Contracts Stocks Section New Listed 🔹 Trading Starts: Now Open 🔹 Supports 4x leverage CFD Trading Links: SHLD (GLOBAL X DEFENSE TECH ETF): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/SHLD DRAM (Roundhill Memory ETF): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/DRAM GME (GameStop): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/GME NBIX (Neurocrine Biosciences Inc.): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/NBIX BAX (Baxter International Inc.): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/BAX KMI (Kinder Morgan Inc.): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/KMI CFG (Citizens Financial Group): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/CFG Z (Zillow Group Inc): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/Z DVN (Devon Energy Corp): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/DVN ADP (Automatic Data Processing Inc): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/ADP ADM (Archer-Daniels-Midland Co): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/ADM GPN (Global Payments Inc): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/GPN SIRI (Sirius XM Holdings Inc): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/SIRI ECL (Ecolab Inc.): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/ECL MPC (Marathon Petroleum Corp): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/MPC MDLZ (Mondelez International Inc): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/MDLZ BKR (Baker Hughes Co): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/BKR EL (Estée Lauder Companies): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/EL LVS (Las Vegas Sands Corp): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/LVS LHX (L3Harris Technologies Inc): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/LHX VALE (Vale do Rio Doce): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/VALE A (Agilent Technologies Inc): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/A FOXA (Fox Corp): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/FOXA TJX (TJX Companies Inc): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/TJX CLX (Clorox Company): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/CLX CCI (Crown Castle Intl Corp): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/CCI FAST (Fastenal Co.): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/FAST HLT (Hilton Worldwide Holdings Inc): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/HLT HOG (Harley-Davidson Inc.): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/HOG DLR (Digital Realty Trust Inc): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/DLR PPG (PPG Industries Inc.): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/PPG MTCH (Match Group Inc.): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/MTCH PLD (Prologis Inc.): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/PLD EMR (Emerson Electric Co.): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/EMR KODK (Eastman Kodak Co): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/KODK SWKS (Skyworks Solutions Inc.): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/SWKS AEP (American Electric Power Inc): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/AEP MDT (Medtronic plc): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/MDT OMC (Omnicom Group): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/OMC NSC (Norfolk Southern Corp): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/NSC GFI (Gold Fields Ltd): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/GFI BMY (Bristol-Myers Squibb Co): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/BMY ROK (Rockwell Automation Inc.): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/ROK LEN (Lennar Corp): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/LEN ETSY (Etsy Inc.): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/ETSY ADI (Analog Devices Inc): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/ADI CHTR (Charter Communications Inc.): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/CHTR NTRS (Northern Trust Corp): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/NTRS NBR (Nabors Industries Ltd.): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/NBR EDU (New Oriental Education): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/EDU VFS (VinFast Auto): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/VFS SENS (Senseonich Holdings Inc.): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/SENS ETD (Ethan Allen Interiors Inc): https://www.gate.com/tradfi/trade/ETD #TradfiTradingChallenge
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GasFeeLover

GasFeeLover

05-14 15:01
I just came across an interesting discussion topic—speculation about the true identity of Bitcoin’s creator. Recently, an HBO documentary claimed to have cracked the mystery of Satoshi Nakamoto’s identity. Although who exactly it was remains disputed, the top candidate on prediction websites is Len Sassaman, far ahead of other contenders. Many people may not have heard of this name, but his story is worth knowing. Speaking of Len Sassaman, this guy was a true cypherpunk—smart, fearless, and idealistic. He devoted his whole life to protecting personal freedom through cryptography, took part in the development of PGP encryption and open-source privacy technologies, and studied P2P networks under the guidance of digital currency pioneer David Chaum. In hacker communities, he was also a legendary figure, with connections to many major personalities in the history of information security and cryptocurrency. But on July 3, 2011, at the age of only 31, Len Sassaman chose to leave the world after enduring long-term depression and functional neurological disorders. Coincidentally, the timing of his death nearly matches the time when Satoshi disappeared. Two months earlier, Satoshi posted his final message: "I have moved on to other things, and may not appear again." After that, there was complete silence—leaving behind a pile of unfinished code, fierce debates about Bitcoin’s vision, and BTC worth $64 billion that still remains untouched to this day. We have already lost too many hackers to suicide caused by depression. Aaron Swartz, Gene Kan, Ilya Zhitomirskiy, James Dolan... they all became victims of the depression epidemic that plagued the tech world. Imagine what might have happened if Bitcoin’s founder had left before completing it. As for why Len Sassaman is listed as the most likely candidate for Satoshi, it comes down to his technical background. This guy had deep expertise in cryptography, public key infrastructure, P2P network design, practical security architecture, and privacy technology. He was largely self-taught and joined the Internet Engineering Task Force at 18, working on TCP/IP protocol development—this thing is the foundation of the internet, and later also the foundation of the Bitcoin network. In 1999, Len Sassaman moved to the Bay Area and quickly became a core figure in the cypherpunk community. He lived with BitTorrent founder Bram Cohen and was active in that legendary cypherpunk mailing list—where Satoshi first announced Bitcoin. Other hackers remember him as a clever and humorous guy, even chasing squirrels at cypherpunk parties. What’s crucial is that Len Sassaman’s contributions to PGP encryption development were substantial. While working at Network Associates, he developed PGP together with Hal Finney (Bitcoin’s first contributor). He also took part in the OpenPGP implementation of GNU Privacy Guard, and even designed new encryption protocols with Phil Zimmerman, the inventor of PGP. And Satoshi once said he hoped Bitcoin’s role in money would be like strong encryption (such as PGP) plays for file security. There’s another interesting detail: Len Sassaman and Finney were both developers of remailer technology. What is a remailer? Simply put, it’s a server used to send messages anonymously or pseudonymously—an immediate predecessor of Bitcoin. Len was the lead developer and main maintainer of the Mixmaster remailer. The architecture of this technology is remarkably similar to Bitcoin’s—both transmit data through a P2P network; the difference is that Bitcoin transmits transaction data rather than messages. In 2004, Len Sassaman finally got the opportunity he had been dreaming of—becoming a researcher and doctoral candidate in the COSIC research group at KU Leuven University in Belgium. His doctoral supervisor was David Chaum, the man often called the "father of digital currency." Chaum proposed the concept of cryptographic money as early as 1983, and in his 1982 doctoral thesis he described all the elements of blockchain—except one. What does that mean? By combining Chaum’s ideas with his own innovations, Satoshi filled in that final missing piece. During his time in Belgium, Len Sassaman focused on developing privacy-enhancing protocols with "real-world application value." His main project was Pynchon Gate—an evolution of remailer technology co-developed with Bram Cohen—which enabled pseudo-anonymous information retrieval through a distributed node network without needing to trust third parties. How deep was the relationship between this project and Bitcoin? As the research went deeper, Len gradually shifted his focus to the Byzantine problem—which was one of the major obstacles in early P2P networks, and also key to ensuring the security and decentralization of cryptocurrency systems. Here’s another fascinating detail: analysis of Satoshi’s posting history suggests he was a European "night owl." He typically developed Bitcoin only after working or finishing studying during the day. Although Len Sassaman was American, the English he used was British English—exactly the same writing style as Satoshi’s. Both used phrases like "bloody difficult," "flat," and "maths," as well as the dd/mm/yyyy date format. Even the genesis block of Bitcoin quoted that day’s headline from The Times—a newspaper mainly circulated in the UK and Europe, especially common in Belgian academia. From a technical depth perspective, building Bitcoin requires understanding economics, cryptography, and P2P networks—Len Sassaman had unusually early exposure and a deep understanding in all three. Alongside Bram Cohen, he witnessed the rise and fall of MojoNation, one of the earliest publicly released digital currencies, which used Mojo tokens as the foundation for a P2P economy. Len saw the lesson of how it collapsed due to hyperinflation, and Satoshi clearly learned from the same lesson. When designing Bitcoin, Satoshi intentionally built in an embedded deflationary mechanism to ensure stability. One more detail: Len Sassaman and Tor founder Roger Dingledine both participated in developing the Mixminion remailer protocol, and the two even gave a joint presentation at Black Hat. In 2002, Len and Bram co-founded the CodeCon conference, focusing on "projects with working, runnable code." At the 2005 CodeCon, Finney demonstrated an improved BitTorrent client that could send P2P digital currency—described as "the world’s first transparent server, promoting a distributed, cooperative RPOW server world." From an ideological perspective, both Len Sassaman and Satoshi demonstrated an especially strong conviction and commitment to open knowledge. Len contributed many open-source projects and did volunteer work. He once said, "The pursuit of knowledge is a fundamental part of humanity. Any prior restrictions, I believe, are an infringement on our freedom of thought and consciousness." And Satoshi chose to distribute Bitcoin through free, open-source grassroots projects—completely different from the patent-and-venture-capital route that people like Chaum and Stefan Brand took before him. Finally, the story is a bit heavy. After an incident in 2006, Len Sassaman began experiencing increasingly severe seizures and functional neurological problems, which worsened the depression he had started having since his teenage years. As a victim of stigma, he "felt he had to maintain a superpower-like facade" and "was afraid" that his worsening health would ruin his work and disappoint the people who cared about him. Even so, he kept working, kept writing papers, and even gave a lecture at Dartmouth a few months before his death. But he managed to hide the severity of his condition from almost everyone. On Bitcoin’s blockchain, there is a transaction with an embedded obituary—that’s the most fitting tribute to Len Sassaman. In this way, he is forever inscribed in the system he may have helped create. We have lost too many talented hackers to suicide. If Len Sassaman and these other pioneers had received the care and respect they deserved, what would they have brought to the world? That’s a question worth reflecting on.
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FreeRider

FreeRider

05-14 13:08
I recently saw that HBO released a documentary claiming they finally discovered who Satoshi Nakamoto is, the mysterious creator of Bitcoin. The truth is, HBO's marketing isn't very explicit, but well, the topic reopened a debate that never dies in the crypto community. The usual suspects remain the same: Hal Finney, Dorian Nakamoto, Nick Szabo, Adam Back. But there’s a name that in recent years has gained a lot of ground on prediction sites: Len Sassaman. And the more I read about this guy, the more convinced I am that he was at least someone incredibly important in the history that led to Bitcoin. Len Sassaman’s story is honestly one of those that makes you think. He was a true cypherpunk, not one of those who just talk on Twitter. From a very young age, he got into cryptography, privacy protocols, P2P technologies. By 18, he was working with the fundamental internet protocols at the Internet Engineering Task Force. All self-taught, from a small town in Pennsylvania. In 1999, he moved to the Bay Area and became a key figure in the cyberpunk community. He lived with Bram Cohen, the creator of BitTorrent. He participated in the legendary cypherpunk mailing list where Satoshi first announced Bitcoin. Other hackers remember him as brilliant, idealistic, willing to defend individual freedoms through technology. Now, what’s interesting is that Len Sassaman wasn’t just an activist. He was a serious technical expert. He worked on PGP, Mixmaster, remailer technologies. These remailers, by the way, were direct precursors to Bitcoin. David Chaum invented them along with the idea of digital money. Remailers were servers that allowed anonymous message sending, and Bitcoin’s architecture is surprisingly similar: instead of forwarding messages, nodes transmit transactions. In 2004, Len Sassaman achieved what he called “his dream job”: working as a doctoral researcher at COSIC, at the University of Leuven, Belgium. His supervisor was David Chaum, literally the father of digital currency. Few can say they worked directly with Chaum. Len did. During those years, between 2008 and 2010, when Bitcoin was being developed, Len was increasingly active in financial cryptography. He attended specialized conferences, spoke about digital money, worked on Pynchon Gate, a project that evolved remailer technology for pseudo-anonymous information recovery in distributed networks. Basically, he was working on problems very close to what Bitcoin would solve. There are fascinating details connecting Satoshi to Europe. Bitcoin’s whitepaper uses British spelling. The genesis block contains a headline from The Times dated January 3, 2009, the print edition only distributed in the UK and Europe. Satoshi’s posting times suggest he was a “night owl” in Europe. Len Sassaman was living in Belgium at that time. But what hits me the most is the ending. In 2006, Len began experiencing non-epileptic seizures and functional neurological problems. That worsened a depression that had haunted him since adolescence. He felt he had to maintain a facade of superpowers, hide how serious his situation was. He kept working, writing articles, giving university talks like at Dartmouth, until months before his death. On July 3, 2011, Len Sassaman took his own life. He was 31. Two months earlier, Satoshi sent his last message: “I’ve moved on to other things and may not be present anymore.” After that, Satoshi disappeared completely. Left behind 169 code commits, 539 posts in a year, and a fortune in Bitcoin that remains untouched. Looking at Len Sassaman’s contribution history, I see someone with all the necessary skills. Academic cryptography, P2P network design, security architecture, privacy technologies, deep roots in the cyberpunk community. He had the ideological conviction and hacker spirit to build something anonymous and revolutionary. I’m not saying this is certain. But there are too many coincidences. Too many connections. And what touches me most is that in every Bitcoin node, there’s an embedded obituary in the transaction data. It’s a monument to Len Sassaman. Maybe it’s a coincidence. Or maybe it’s the only way someone had to honor the one who truly built this. What I do know is that we’ve lost too many hackers to suicide. Aaron Swartz, Gene Kan, Ilya Zhitomirskiy, James Dolan. And possibly Len Sassaman. All victims of depression, stigma, not receiving the help they needed. If the Bitcoin creator suffered like this, fought like this, and built something so revolutionary while falling apart inside... that says something about who we are as a community and what we’ve failed to recognize.
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