Settings

Theme

Satoshi Nakamoto moves his 6.5 yr old bitcoins

blockchain.info

113 points by synsynack 10 years ago · 80 comments

Reader

sprice 10 years ago

Looks like a problem with Blockchain.info

https://btc.blockr.io/address/info/12c6DSiU4Rq3P4ZxziKxzrL5L...

edit:// Reddit has more info: http://www.reddit.com/r/Bitcoin/comments/3frht4/satoshi_naka...

jackgavigan 10 years ago

Looks like a false alarm. Other blockchain explorer sites/tools don't show this transaction:

Biteasy: https://www.biteasy.com/blockchain/addresses/12c6DSiU4Rq3P4Z...

Blockr: https://btc.blockr.io/address/info/12c6DSiU4Rq3P4ZxziKxzrL5L...

Blocktrail: https://www.blocktrail.com/BTC/address/12c6DSiU4Rq3P4ZxziKxz...

WalletExplorer: https://www.walletexplorer.com/wallet/1cd472673f5a7d4f?from_...

pmlamotte 10 years ago

For those not aware, the original 50 coins sent to this address were generated from the genesis block, the first block on the blockchain. However, the transaction is still unconfirmed, so until it is this could be nothing. Market has been scared downwards though.

ChrisClark 10 years ago

It only appears to be recorded on blockchain.info. None of the other blockchain explorers seem to see it.

I'd hold off on the news until it's been confirmed.

Edit: Others have checked and can't find any of these transactions in the blockchain. Either a blockchain.info bug or hack at this point. Nothing has moved.

  • 0x0 10 years ago

    Would it be possible, just by looking at the blockchain.info website, to prove that whatever is going on is signed by someone with the private keys to these coins? If the transaction signatures validates, does it matter whether the they are accepted by the network - it would still prove "he's alive"?

    • ikeboy 10 years ago

      It would; however in this case, the signatures do not validate, they're from a different address.

artursapek 10 years ago

And the price tanks immediately: https://cryptowat.ch/bitfinex/btcusd/3min

  • MSM 10 years ago

    "Tanking"?

    That didn't even cause the lowest trading price of the past 24 hours.

    • artursapek 10 years ago

      For a 5 minute window, I'd consider that tanking. It looks like there is an issue with bc.info, so it looks like traders are holding off making more decisions on this news.

  • TomGullen 10 years ago

    That's not a tank, it's a $2 drop in price caused by ~600 BTC in volume. Just a thin order book (and arguably a good spot to buy in for a short term trade)

  • liveoneggs 10 years ago

    that graph is pretty cool

boxy310 10 years ago

At an exchange rate of $284.45 USD/BTC, this comes out to a transaction of a little more than $14,000. However, as creator of the Bitcoin protocol and an early adopter, and that this is one of his oldest wallets, he may be moving unknown quantities of Bitcoin. This could cause a disruption on the open BTC markets if he exchanges a large quantity -- but for what reason? No one knows, since Mr. or Ms. Nakamoto is anonymous.

toyg 10 years ago

That's about $15k at today's rate, according to Google. Not much, really.

  • Simulacra 10 years ago

    That would pay off my student loans nicely. $15k is still much to some :)

    • toyg 10 years ago

      yeah but he's reportedly worth millions among various wallets. If he spends them all in one go, the market will take a big hit.

      If it's just 15k, it's not a biggie, apart from the news that he's alive (or at least, that somebody has control of some of his wallets).

grubles 10 years ago

From the discussion in #bitcoin on freenode, this is just an elaborate trolling.

boomzilla 10 years ago

Bitcoin newbie here. How do we know that's him?

  • justizin 10 years ago

    We know that the very first bitcoins in the blockchain are "his", and IIRC some other coins have been tracked as "his" based on being in the same wallet or wallets. There are a number of articles on this over the past years.

    I say, "his", since we don't know who the creator is, could be a group of people, might not be a man.

    • sneak 10 years ago

      > We know that the very first bitcoins in the blockchain are "his",

      Technically, we do not know that, we can only assume it.

      There is no evidence that the person or persons known as Satoshi have ever mined coins on the mainnet.

oxalo 10 years ago

What's the possibility someone brute forced his private key?

chasing 10 years ago

Is this lack of anonymity a feature of Bitcoin?

  • corysama 10 years ago

    Yes, actually. Bitcoin is widely mis-reported as anonymous when the reality is that every bitcoin transaction ever made is publicly and permanently recorded in the distributed ledger. That's how anyone and everyone can verify that the ledger is legit. These transactions are associated with wallet ID numbers, not names. And, anyone can create a fresh, unassociated, empty wallet at any time. But, it's not hard to follow the money and infer who is doing what. Thus, the technical description is that Bitcoin isn't anonymous, it's pseudonymous.

    • phkahler 10 years ago

      ...every bitcoin transaction ever made is publicly and permanently recorded in the distributed ledger...

      Does this ledger ever get rolled up? I thought something like that was part of the system. Otherwise you'd have an ever growing transaction log and the system would fail eventually, wouldn't it?

      • Obi_Juan_Kenobi 10 years ago

        Yes and no.

        Since pruning support was added, a full node no longer needs to have the full blockchain. In situations where storage is limited, you simply need enough for verifying new blocks.

        Many nodes will still keep the full transaction history, though there is no requirement to for bitcoin to function. As long as there is interest in looking at old transactions, people will hold on to that old data.

        • sp332 10 years ago

          Don't you have to download the full blockchain when you bootstap a new node, to verify all the transactions? After you verify that a transaction has been spent, you can prune it from your local copy. But someone still has to keep all the old transactions around for new nodes to download, right?

          • Natanael_L 10 years ago

            In theory, in the future the blockchain status can be compressed to just the "UTXO set" (unspent transaction outputs) with a Zero-knowledge proof of correctness. That would be a form of maximal trust free pruning.

  • 26cf805ae26f 10 years ago

    It's a consequence of the fact that the general ledger (aka the blockchain) is public information. It has to be, otherwise the system would not work; what I mean is that you cannot design a crypto currency whose ledger is not public information.

    • nullc 10 years ago

      > It has to be, otherwise the system would not work; what I mean is that you cannot design a crypto currency whose ledger is not public information.

      I specifically addressed this misunderstanding in this talk: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Twynh6xIKUcat 38:48 while explaining this work: https://people.xiph.org/~greg/confidential_values.txt

      You can think of it this way: When you sign a message you prove knoweldge of a private key (discrete log of a particular public key). Everyone can verify the signature, and yet they do not learn anything about the private key they didn't know before seeing the signature.

      There is no conflict between verifyability and privacy.

    • kragen 10 years ago

      It depends on what you mean by "cryptocurrency". None of the Chaum-based Digital Cash system designs of the 80s and 90s featured a public ledger, but they weren't decentralized. The public ledger was an innovation of Bitcoin (as far as I know, even Szabo's property title system didn't propose to make the ledger actually public), and many people at the time felt that it was a bad idea, since it gave up anonymity.

      It seems plausible that fully homomorphic encryption will eventually enable a practical and fully anonymous cryptocurrency, but nobody has figured out how yet. Also, even without FHE, maybe someone will figure out how to make a Bitcoin-style public-ledger system that somehow uses Chaumian blinded keys instead of ditching anonymity entirely.

SlalomStallone 10 years ago

What would the value be in USD?

  • neilh23 10 years ago

    According to Google - $14,281.50

    • artursapek 10 years ago

      The point isn't that those 50 Bitcoins are worth $14k, it's that he owns up to a million of them, and nobody is sure who he is or whether he still had control of those coins. This seems to prove that he does, unless blockchain.info is wrong.

      • sneak 10 years ago

        > it's that he owns up to a million of them

        We have no evidence that that is true, however it is widely speculated and believed to be so.

        • nullc 10 years ago

          The speculation for that particular number is trivially falsified: It's based on assumption that all unmoved coins in the first year were mined by the system's creator (no justification is provided for this assumption).

          And it is false, many other people mined during that time and lost keys (myself included).

  • fizerkhan 10 years ago

    i think, it is 50 BTC, roughly 14229 US Dollar

rainboiboi 10 years ago

Someone kindly explain what's going on please?!

  • c-slice 10 years ago

    The anonymous inventor of bitcoin had a 50 bitcoin put into the first address in the blockchain. It's never been moved (because you can see when bitcoins get moved) but today he moved 50 bitcoin out of the account. We're not totally sure if it's him though, it could have been a bug or a malicious transaction.

sktrdie 10 years ago

I'd suggest you delete this post. It's a false alarm.

jo6gwb 10 years ago

This is really exciting!

bra-ket 10 years ago

Who is Satoshi Nakamoto?

Keyboard Shortcuts

j
Next item
k
Previous item
o / Enter
Open selected item
?
Show this help
Esc
Close modal / clear selection