Adam Back Calls ‘Finding Satoshi’ Documentary’s Finney-Sassaman Theory ‘Odd’
Blockstream CEO Adam Back has pushed back on a new documentary’s claim that Bitcoin (BTC) creator Satoshi Nakamoto was two late cryptographers, Hal Finney and Len Sassaman.
In a series of posts on X, Back labeled the theory “odd” and flagged contradictions, along with what he described as a post hoc “patch” in the investigators’ reasoning.
Who Does Finding Satoshi Name as Bitcoin’s Creator?
“Finding Satoshi” is a new documentary released on April 22. It follows a four-year investigation by New York Times bestselling author William D. Cohan and private investigator Tyler Maroney of Quest Research and Investigations.
“Finding Satoshi presents the conclusion reached after a four-year, evidence-based investigation, drawing on original reporting and rare access to key figures in crypto to uncover the human ideas, motivations, and philosophy behind the code that reshaped global finance,” the description reads.
The documentary also features interviews with Michael Saylor, Fred Ehrsam, Joseph Lubin, Gary Gensler, and more. The film suggests that Finney composed Bitcoin’s code. Meanwhile, Sassaman handled the nine-page Bitcoin white paper.
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Finney died due to complications from Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) in August 2014. Sassaman died by suicide in July 2011, months after Satoshi’s last public post.
Stylometry researcher Florian Cafiero suggested that Back was the closest match to Satoshi’s white paper. But Cafiero stopped short of a definitive verdict, calling the result inconclusive and noting that Finney nearly tied for the top spot.
Finney, for his part, has denied it. In a 2014 interview with Forbes, he rejected the theory that he was Bitcoin’s mysterious founder.
Adam Back Challenges Core Assumptions
The latest claims in Finding Satoshi have drawn some scrutiny. Back outlined several reasons for rejecting the theory.
He was previously flagged as a Satoshi candidate in a recent New York Times investigation by journalist John Carreyrou, a claim he denied. Back argued that the theory is self-contradictory.
“Because ‘Len Sassaman lived in Belgium and worked on his PhD from 2004 until his death on July 3, 2011,’ and they also say ‘Hal was the coder, and Len the writer,’ so it’s self-contradictory,” he wrote.
According to Back, Fran Finney’s comments were over-interpreted. He argued Hal helped Satoshi as an early user and bug reporter, not a co-author.
He added that New York Times reporter Nathaniel Popper, author of “Digital Gold,” previously met Finney and reviewed his emails and wallet.
“also kind of odd theory that len and/or hal were satoshi yet left their families with no bitcoin, in hal’s case after running up lots of medical bills, and/or creates risk for them if people wrongly think they do have 1mil btc, which they confirm they don’t,” he said.
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Satoshi’s Silence Is No Longer Just a Mystery; It May Be a Security Crisis
Now, if Finney and Sassaman were indeed behind Bitcoin’s creation, their deaths carry consequences far beyond historical curiosity. Satoshi’s estimated stash of 1 million BTC, untouched for over a decade, sits in wallets with no known heir.
This makes the coins a prime target in the emerging debate over quantum computing threats to blockchain security. The concern is straightforward: sufficiently advanced quantum machines could, in theory, crack the cryptographic keys protecting dormant wallets. Thus, Satoshi’s fortune would be among the most attractive targets imaginable.
The Bitcoin community has been divided on how to respond. Some voices have called for the coins to be frozen. Others have pushed back. They argue that this would set a dangerous precedent and undermine Bitcoin’s principles.
For now, the coins remain untouched. But as quantum computing inches closer to viability, the debate will only get louder.
The post Adam Back Calls ‘Finding Satoshi’ Documentary’s Finney-Sassaman Theory ‘Odd’ appeared first on BeInCrypto.
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