A litany of insights into the early days of cryptocurrency were recently revealed when Bitcoin creator Satoshi Nakamoto’s earliest collaborator, Martti Malmi, published 120 pages of email correspondences between the two on GitHub on Feb. 23.
My email correspondence with Satoshi in 2009-2011: https://t.co/jyoX8gXckp— Martti Malmi (@marttimalmi) February 23, 2024
The true identity of Nakamoto remains a point of conjecture throughout the greater cryptocurrency and blockchain community. However, the emails recently published on GitHub by Malmi were initially introduced as evidence in a London court case brought by the Crypto Open Patent Alliance against Craig Wright, who has claimed to be Nakamoto.
Based on Cointelegraph’s cursory examination of the emails, there are no smoking guns or tell-tale revelations that would immediately shine a light on Satoshi’s true identity. But for historians and Bitcoin lore enthusiasts, the emails include many fantastic quotes and a general air of Satoshi-ness — that same straightforward, simple-yet-comprehensive, no-nonsense style that permeates the Bitcoin white paper.
Satoshi believed #Bitcoin mining would be less energy intensive than the legacy banking system.
Note: This is by far his best new quote pic.twitter.com/FsCxJlj8Xf— Rizzo (@pete_rizzo_) February 23, 2024
While it’s long been posited that Satoshi themselves came up with the term “cryptocurrency,” one email sent to Malmi on June 11, 2009, appears to poke a major hole in this theory.
To Malmi’s credit, he responded that “it sounds good” and added that it sounded more interesting than “digital P2P cash.”
Malmi’s email correspondence also demonstrates Satoshi’s keen understanding of anonymity, what it meant and what the risks of misinformation could mean for Bitcoin.
As Satoshi wrote in one email:
The email continues to essentially predict the rise of blockchain forensics: