Craig Wright, the Australian computer scientist has claimed for years to be Satoshi Nakamoto—the pseudonymous creator of Bitcoin—has signaled that he may be ending his infamous campaign to convince the world that he is crypto’s founding father.
“I have been too angry for too long as I cared for external validation,” Wright tweeted late Wednesday. “The only validation I seek now is from my family and from seeing my ideas come to fruition and to be used by the world. Not everyone wants what I have to offer…”
It does not matter if you like me. The goal of what I am doing is simple, global micropayments.
One day, people will understand, not because it is inevitable, but because I will not give up on that goal and vision. We shall start to scale in 2023. Millions of TPS first…
Since 2016, Wright publicly claimed to have invented Bitcoin, despite having never been able to produce the private keys to Satoshi’s Bitcoin address—essentially the only way to prove it.
Wright’s attorneys told Decrypt in 2020 that the computer scientist did not have possession of Satoshi’s keys, and would not clarify who else had them or why. But they maintained that Wright expected to receive them at a later date. In the two years since, none have emerged.
In August, a British court ruled that Wright submitted “deliberately false” evidence in a defamation case he filed against Peter McCormack, a podcaster who repeatedly…
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