Compartir este artículo

Gavin Andresen Now Regrets Role in Satoshi Nakamoto Saga

Gavin Andreseen says he now regrets getting involved in trying to verify Crag Wright's claim he is Satoshi Nakamoto.

Actualizado 11 sept 2021, 12:37 p. .m.. Publicado 16 nov 2016, 6:00 p. .m.. Traducido por IA
Gavin Andresen Web Summit

The last person known to communicate directly with bitcoin's pseudonymous creator says he now regrets getting involved in an effort early this year to reveal that person's identity.

In a blog post published today, the former lead maintainer of Bitcoin Core, bitcoin's dominant software project, Gavin Andresen wrote that regardless of the veracity of this person's claims he believes the public should "ignore him."

STORY CONTINUES BELOW
No te pierdas otra historia.Suscríbete al boletín de Crypto Daybook Americas hoy. Ver todos los boletines

Andresen wrote:

"I regret ever getting involved in the 'Who was Satoshi?' game, and am going to spend my time on more fun and productive pursuits."

The statements come months after Gizmodo and Wired published articles that identified Australian academic Craig Wright as Nakamoto in May, and statements made by Andresen supporting the finding (though soon after, the reveal was disputed).

The following month, it was revealed that Wright was pursing a series of blockchain patents, giving him a potential financial motive for the claim.

Andresen elaborated on the fall-out after those events in today's post:

"Either he was Satoshi, but really wants the world to think he isn't, so he created an impossible-to-untangle web of truths, half-truths and lies. And ruined his reputation in the process."

Andresen directly addresses his audience imploring them to ignore Wright, regardless of the veracity of his claims. Instead, he says to leave the potential fraudulent claim to the alleged victims and law enforcement.

As for those "more fun pursuits," we've reached out to Andresen for further comment, but at press time, have received no response.

Gavin Andresen image via Flickr

Más para ti

Struggling Coinbase gets price target cut from JPMorgan ahead of Thursday earnings

Coinbase CEO, Brian Armstrong, at Consensus 2019 (CoinDesk)

Shares of COIN are down nearly 30% this year, with analysts warning that softer trading and crypto prices are likely to weigh on revenue.

Lo que debes saber:

  • JPMorgan cut its December 2026 price target on Coinbase to $290 from $399 ahead of fourth-quarter earnings, citing weaker crypto trading volumes, softer prices and slower USDC growth.
  • The bank still rates Coinbase Overweight, but projects a sharp sequential drop in earnings and EBITDA, even after factoring in a full quarter of revenue from the Deribit derivatives acquisition.
  • Other firms, including Barclays and Compass Point, are more cautious or bearish, warning that retail trading, blockchain rewards and subscription and services revenue may miss expectations and remain closely tied to overall crypto prices.