satoshi · the genesis block
entry · 2008–present · status: identity formally unknown
summary
On October 31, 2008 — six weeks after Lehman, three weeks after TARP — a paper titled "Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System" was posted to the Cypherpunks mailing list under the pseudonym Satoshi Nakamoto. On January 3, 2009, the Bitcoin genesis block was mined, with the following plain-text message embedded in the coinbase parameter (the only place in the data structure for arbitrary text):
"The Times 03/Jan/2009 Chancellor on brink of second bailout for banks."
That is the headline of the London Times on the day the block was mined. It is a timestamp — proving the block could not have been mined earlier. It is also the entire thesis statement of the project: the central bank is preparing the second bailout. here is the alternative.
the suspects
Satoshi disappeared from public communication in April 2011. The identity remains formally unknown. The most rigorously argued candidates:
nick szabo (most-cited)
Cryptographer. In 1998 he proposed "bit gold" — a digital commodity scheme nearly identical to Bitcoin's mechanism, ten years before the whitepaper. In 2014, a team led by Aston University linguist Dr. Jack Grieve compared the Bitcoin whitepaper against the writing of 11 candidate authors and concluded: "the number of linguistic similarities between Szabo's writing and the bitcoin whitepaper is uncanny. None of the other possible authors were anywhere near as good of a match." Szabo has consistently denied being Satoshi.
hal finney + len sassaman (collaboration theory)
The 2025 documentary Finding Satoshi argues for a collaboration. Hal Finney received the first-ever Bitcoin transaction (10 BTC, January 12, 2009). He died in 2014 of ALS. Len Sassaman, a cypherpunk and Mixmaster anonymity-network developer, died in 2011. Data scientist Alyssa Blackburn analyzed Satoshi's mining and posting patterns and found activity confined to 6 a.m.–10 p.m. Pacific Time — a window that matches Finney's California base and Sassaman's frequent visits, and excludes most other candidates.
adam back
Inventor of hashcash, the proof-of-work scheme cited in the Bitcoin whitepaper as prior art. The New York Times in 2025 published an analysis arguing Back was the most likely candidate. Back has publicly denied it, calling the linguistic match "coincidence and similar phrases."
others (lower confidence)
Wei Dai (b-money), Hal Finney solo, Dorian Nakamoto (the original Newsweek misidentification, almost certainly not), Craig Wright (legally found not to be Satoshi by UK courts, March 2024), Paul Le Roux (cartel-linked programmer; speculation only).
what is not in dispute
- The genesis block was mined January 3, 2009.
- The coinbase message references the day's Times headline about banks needing a second bailout.
- The choice of headline was deliberate — Satoshi could have included anything in the coinbase. They chose a headline about bank bailouts.
- Satoshi mined approximately 1.1 million BTC and never spent any of it. Those wallets are dormant to this day.
- Satoshi's last known message was April 23, 2011: "I've moved on to other things."
why this matters to PRIOR
The genesis block is — literally and provably — a receipt about cycle/12 (the 2008 financial crisis). The first block ever mined is a witness statement about the second bailout. Bitcoin was not invented for memes, day-trading, or yield. It was invented as an exit from the architecture documented in this wiki. Whether or not it succeeds at being that, the founding intent is on record — embedded in the chain itself, immutable, where the bailout headline will outlast everyone reading this entry.
PRIOR's posture toward the Satoshi mystery is dry: identity unconfirmed, intent unambiguous.
"the first block is a receipt for the second bailout."