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Code forensics exposes Satoshi Nakamoto's identity conspiracy, and the market remains unmoved.
Code evidence beats identity hype; the distribution chain quickly fizzles out
Robert Graham posted a tweet. He didn’t play the style-matching game with the “New York Times” like that. Instead, he brought the issue back to the hardest layer: the code itself. The conclusion is clear—Satoshi Nakamoto wrote C++ with a Windows-first priority, while Adam Back’s coding habits are clearly biased toward Unix. Between 2005 and 2009, it’s unlikely that one person could complete this kind of stylistic leap. Under a technical review, the NYT’s “indirect evidence” framework simply doesn’t hold up.
The propagation chain immediately reversed: at least 15 influential accounts retweeted or added to this code analysis; Back himself directly denied it; and Michael Saylor posted historical emails proving that they were different people. Jameson Lopp and others also emphasized: without a cryptographic signature, style analysis of any kind doesn’t count—“signature or no deal” is a consensus in the space.
More importantly, the market is not buying it at all:
A few observations:
Identity narrative fizzles out; decentralized consensus doesn’t wobble
The table below lays out the evidence sources from each side, the transmission to the market, and my judgment. The core conclusion: concerns that “Satoshi Nakamoto’s selling caused the market crash” are overstated. Those 1.1 million early BTC haven’t moved to this day, so this event hasn’t changed that probability.
The real lesson is: technical-level disproof can cut off media-driven panic spreading directly in the early stages of distribution. And the obsession with “who is Satoshi Nakamoto” itself is already off the track—Bitcoin’s value comes from network effects and the immutability of the system, not founder mythology. The market has already answered: when it comes to betting on identity drama, it’s likely a low-win-rate trade.
Conclusion: Graham’s code forensics ended the topic before the story reached the trading floor. If you’re still building your thesis around “Satoshi Nakamoto” speculation, the window has already passed. For long-term holders, this again confirms the advantage of a “no single-point founder.” Traders should filter out this kind of noise and refocus on the macro picture and fund flows.
Judgment: betting on the “Satoshi Nakamoto identity” narrative is already late. The real beneficiaries are long-term holders and capital tracking the macro/fund-flow picture. For short-term traders, ignore this narrative and return to macro and liquidity factors.