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Have you ever stopped to think about this crazy theory that's been circulating? The HBO documentary "Money Electric" is reviving an old speculation: was Len Sassaman Satoshi Nakamoto?
For those who don't know, Len Sassaman was a serious guy. A real cryptographer, involved with the cypherpunks in San Francisco from a young age, he worked on major projects like Pretty Good Privacy and GNU Privacy Guard. Co-founder of Osogato with his wife Meredith Patterson. All very legitimate.
But there's one detail that makes things interesting: Sassaman died in 2011 at the age of 31 while pursuing a PhD in electrical engineering at KU Leuven in Belgium. And that's where the speculation begins. Nakamoto disappeared two months before Sassaman's death. Coincidence? Maybe.
What’s catching the investigators’ attention is that Len Sassaman’s academic background was impressive, his cryptography experience was top-tier, and linguistic analyses show similarities between his writing and Nakamoto’s. Some find it convincing, others dismiss it entirely.
Now comes the strangest part: they say Sassaman left a note with 24 random words. Sounds strange? That’s because in the crypto community, everyone is thinking the same thing — the seed phrases of 24 words for wallets. Coincidence or a deliberate clue?
Still, his wife and several close people don’t believe this theory. And there’s one more detail that complicates everything: Nakamoto’s billions in Bitcoin have never been touched. If it was Sassaman, why wouldn’t he have moved that?
The thing is, with the release of the documentary, this debate is heating up again. The crypto community has always been obsessed with discovering who really created Bitcoin, and Len Sassaman is just another name on the suspect list. His contributions to cryptography and privacy are real and significant, regardless of whether he’s Satoshi or not.
What’s your take? Do you think there’s a chance it’s true, or is it just speculation?