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Why Satoshi might still hold the keys to their BTC hoard

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âSigh...why delete a wallet instead of moving it aside and keeping the old copy just in case?â
Thatâs Satoshi in October 2010 â only two months before they would post their last public message to Bitcointalk.
Satoshi had been troubleshooting a report of an unconfirmable transaction somehow making it to the chain, which wouldâve been much easier had the person whoâd sent it still had their wallet instance active on their machine.
âYou should never delete a wallet,â Satoshi said, seeming frustrated. And as it so happens, addresses once believed to have been controlled by Satoshi are now sitting on up to 1,125,150 BTC, equivalent to $123.3 billion right now.
If thatâs true, Satoshi would be the 10th richest person in the world, at least for today â about $7 billion behind former Microsoft CEO and hypeman Steve Ballmer.
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Did Satoshi really mine more than 1.1 million bitcoin?
It would mean that Bitcoinâs creator had hoarded about 26% of the circulating supply by the time they urged users never to delete their wallets.
Another 15.5 million coins have been mined since then, bringing down Satoshiâs estimated holdings to 5.6% of the current supply.
Bigger brains than mine have scoured the chain data for clues, and Iâd encourage anyone to read over the detailed work of Bitcoin developers Sergio Lerner and Jameson Lopp, if you havenât already.
Essentially, Lopp independently verified Lernerâs discovery of a particular method of mining that was incredibly powerful in the early years.
Miners usually randomize nonce values on their way to finding valid hashes to generate new coins. But until May 2010, there was a miner â or miners â selecting nonces more systematically.
Whoever they were, they would only search for correct nonces within certain small ranges, rather than the 4.3 billion that exist within the entire valid pool.
They would also maximize their efficiency by incrementing through a then-little-known feature, ExtraNonce, which allows miners to more easily check additional hashes after the whole pool has been exhausted. ExtraNonce was not documented or utilized within the official Bitcoin software itself, so whoever had done this had built their own miner.
These specific processes imprinted a pattern into the chain data through the block header hashes themselves, and Lerner, Lopp and eventually BitMEX researchers all concluded the same things: This method was extremely effective and it had been used to mine up to 1.1 million bitcoin in the first year and a half or so. It tapered off over time until suddenly it stopped.
Satoshiâs estimated hash rate is in red, the total network is in blue. Notice red and blue are positively correlated until late 2009, implying Satoshi dominated mining for almost a year (source).
Lerner had named the pattern âPatoshi,â but itâs never been explicitly proven that Satoshi was the one mining bitcoin in this way. (By the way, check out Sergio Lernerâs recent appearance on Supply Shock.)
Of course, the theory tracks: There were very few miners on the network in 2009, and most simply ran the official Bitcoin software, which didnât contain a customizable ExtraNonce field. Who else but Satoshi would know how to exploit it?
Devilâs advocate: Bitcoin is open source and its code was just not that long in 2009 â only about 9,000 lines. Itâs not outside the realm of possibility that some savant reviewed the mining logic and immediately understood what to do.
Still, even the number of coins mined using the Patoshi method is technically still up for debate. In 2018, BitMEX boffins found only reasonable evidence pointing to a single dominant miner generating between 600,000 and 700,000 BTC â almost 40% fewer than Lernerâs initial calculation.
In that case, Satoshiâs bitcoin would be worth ~only~ $76.7 billion â $10 billion ahead of Binance founder Changpeng Zhao, still making them the 21st richest billionaire in the world.
After all, you should never delete a wallet.
â David

The political discussion around bitcoin in the European Union has been totally non-existent, Swedish MP Dennis Dioukarev said on Supply Shock this week.
Dioukarev is pushing the Swedish Parliament to create its own budget-neutral strategic bitcoin reserve, which would see any bitcoin seized from criminals sent to the nationâs treasury, mirroring the US.
âI think itâs an important first step for us to get this discussion up on the political agenda of the Swedish parliament, but also with all our parliamentarians in the European Parliament,â Dioukarev told Rizzo.
âI will be pushing them and providing them with facts so that they can argue for bitcoin on a European level as well.â
Turns out, they do have megachads in the EU!

Cantor is officially in the Bitcoin financing business, after dishing out part of its first bitcoin loan to Maple Finance for an undisclosed sum. Overall, Cantor expects to lend out $2 billion during its initial phase.
Vivek Ramaswamayâs Strive has privately raised $750 million to buy bitcoin.
Pump up those numbers: Trump Media has signed a deal with institutional investors to raise $2.5 billion for its own BTC treasury.