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Just watched HBO's Money Electric documentary and I gotta say, the whole Satoshi Nakamoto mystery just got way more interesting. They're seriously floating the theory that Len Sassaman could've been Bitcoin's creator, and honestly? The pieces are starting to fit together in a weird way.
So who was Sassaman anyway? He was this incredibly talented cryptographer who got deep into the cypherpunk scene back in San Francisco during his teens. The guy literally worked on Pretty Good Privacy and GNU Privacy Guard - like, foundational privacy tech. He and his wife Meredith Patterson even started their own company called Osogato. But here's the tragic part: he took his own life in 2011 at just 31 years old while studying electrical engineering at KU Leuven in Belgium.
Now the documentary connects some dots that have the crypto community buzzing. Len Sassaman had the academic chops, the cryptography expertise, and linguistic analysis is apparently showing parallels between his writing style and Nakamoto's. There's also this wild detail about Sassaman leaving a suicide note with 24 random words - and yeah, that's the exact number of words in modern crypto seed phrases. Coincidence? Maybe. But it's the kind of thing that makes you think.
What really stands out though: Nakamoto went completely silent around two months before Sassaman's death. Some people are connecting those dots hard. On the flip side, Sassaman's own wife doesn't believe this theory, and plenty of others in the community are skeptical too.
The mystery deepens when you remember that roughly a million Bitcoin from Nakamoto's original holdings - worth around $64 billion today - has literally never been moved. That's been sitting there untouched for over a decade, which honestly just adds another layer to who this person actually was.
Look, whether Len Sassaman was actually Satoshi or not, his contributions to cryptography and privacy tech are legit undeniable. But now that HBO's put this theory out there for mainstream audiences, you know we're gonna be hearing about this for a while. The Satoshi identity question just got way more complicated. What's your take on it?