@dotkrueger and I have spent the better part of a week analyzing in excruciating detail every one of the 260 emails published by @marttimalmi
We have created a narrative around these emails. This is an interpretation, but you will find it very interesting.
Presenting it in 44 slides exclusively here on X.
Enjoy. 1/44
Background.
This dive is based on 260 messages between Satoshi (Bitcoin’s creator) and @marttimalmi (Bitcoin’s first coder).
These emails were submitted as evidence in February 2024 as part of the COPA vs CSW court case - also made public on Github.
COPA aims to stop Craig Wright from asserting copyright claims on Bitcoin.
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Summary of our findings:
🚀Bitcoin operated like a very early stage startup
🕵️♀️Satoshi created a cover story using @marttimalmi as a frontman (and later @gavinandresen)
🇺🇸Satoshi likely operated in the US, as an solo individual - not a group.
🗓️Development began Jan 2008.
🕦System time was set to UK to obfuscate origin.
🇬🇧Anglicisms mixed into American slang probably using spell checkers.
🔥Satoshi left in 2011 as regulatory heat was growing and made him VERY uncomfortable.
3/44
Bitcoin as an early stage startup:
Bitcoin was just like most tech startups.
@marttimalmi and Satoshi having loads of discussion about features, UI, web sites…
'How do we get users to come back daily?'
They had good tech, but were looking for a use case.
4/44
1st email
Martti Malmi was a college student who reached out via the forum to offer to help out with this new cool idea called Bitcoin. 5/44 anti-state.com
First task from Satoshi to @marttimalmi
'I really need someone to copy paste this FAQ into SourceForge' 6/44
According to Satoshi, Bitcoin had one clear value prop: 'send money without any trusted third party over the internet' 7/44
Satoshi: “It would help if there was something for people to use it for." 8/44
Satoshi: 'We need a feature for node retention. People will try it once and leave.' - credit goes to @marttimalmi for coming up with this auto-run concept in Windows. 9/44
Satoshi: 'Let's find some free forum software to use - that would help us to look bigger and attract more attention' 10/44
Satoshi: 'Let's use Liberty Reserve as an on / off ramp to Bitcoin' 11/44
Satoshi: ‘Let’s make sure there is some way to cash out Bitcoin to Liberty Reserve dollars’ 12/44
Satoshi created a cover story:
Satoshi did not want to be the frontman.
Encouraged Malmi to use his real name and address.
Asked Malmi to use his own credit cards / ID for servers and open a bank account in his own name.
13/44
Satoshi: ‘A dangerous thing for me to say, but you can say it’
14/44
Satoshi: ‘Use your real name Martti’ 15/44
Satoshi: ‘Real name for you, alias for me’ 16/44
Satoshi: ‘Martti, you do the interview’ 17/44
Satoshi disappears for a month 18/44
Satoshi used a separate computer for Bitcoin and Bitcoin correspondence - needed to "download emails" intermittently. 19/44
Satoshi: ‘Do you mind handling the cash?’ 20/44
Satoshi: 'Need your address for the money.' 21/44
Satoshi: 'Funding secured' $3600 22/44
SatoshI: 'Let’s not sound too shady' 23/44
Satoshi: 'Once again, please use your real name' 24/44
Moving on to some of the new aspects of Satoshi's process - including info on when development started, Satoshi's attempts to veil his location / timezone, and some confirmations of things we have seen in emails to Mike Hearn (another early btc dev). 25/44
Links to Satoshi - Hearn emails - also a good read on early Satoshi process:
Stumbled upon a (dismissed) court filling by "Bitcoin Manipulation Abatement LLC" against Alameda @SBF_FTX from 2019 accusing them of #Bitcoin price manipulation through various techniques including "spoofing." morrisoncohen.com/siteFiles/file…
Next, May 2022 - the alleged market manipulation analysis by @hellspawncrypto showing the spoofing of Coinbase orders by the "Alameda Engine" triggered the rise of #Bitcoin price to $65k ("engine" reportedly was turned "off" for the last $4k rise to $69k).
@SBF_FTX The 2019 filing against @SBF_FTX was dismissed for what appears to be technical reasons... “plaintiff has failed to comply with the requirements of Fed. R. Civ. P. 9(b) or 8(a)(2), and that dismissal is warranted under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6).” I looked them up.
He gives Nakamoto a shoutout and although he gives some credit towards bitcoin and crypto, he also warns about the dangers. Let's look at some excepts:
"Nakamoto had solved two riddles that had dogged these cryptographers and other technology experts for a couple of decades: first, how to move something of value on the internet without a central intermediary; and relatedly, how to prevent the 'double-spending'"