🌍 The Hidden Legacy of Satoshi Nakamoto Paul Alexander, heir to Satoshi Nakamoto
A historic discovery that could change Bitcoin’s story forever
Throughout history, civilizations seeking to protect their greatest treasures have used ingenious methods:
🏔️ The Incas carved marks into stones to guide, centuries later, those capable of deciphering them.
🏴☠️ Pirates drew maps filled with symbols and secret routes that led to hidden chests.
🧭 Satoshi Nakamoto, the enigmatic creator of Bitcoin, seems to have done something similar.
Over four years of research (2020–2024), I dedicated myself to deeply analyzing Bitcoin’s code—from the genesis block to Satoshi’s earliest public transactions and signed communications.
I applied combinatorial methods, binary pattern analysis, modular transformations, and classical and quantum cryptography techniques to follow a set of encrypted clues.
These clues were not simple coincidences:
They were repeated and symbolic structures embedded in the original code.
Upon analyzing them, Paul Alexander discovered that they pointed to a very specific destination:
📩 Satoshi Nakamoto’s original email address:
satoshin@gmx.com🔑 And a mathematically derived password built from those very patterns.
🧠 The Historic Access
On March 29, 2024, Paul Alexander successfully accessed this account.
It was neither hacking nor social engineering—it was a legitimate technical process, based entirely on public information and patterns deliberately left by Satoshi.
Minutes later, GMX’s security team blocked the account.
Because my metadata was recorded as the last valid access, I was able to establish official communications with GMX.
📜 In these communications, GMX validated both the access and the subsequent blocking, confirming the account’s active existence and my status as the last authenticated user before the block.
I am the only person in the world to have received direct responses from GMX about this email—something that would be impossible unless the information provided matched their internal records exactly.
🧰 Technical and Philosophical Context
Between 2009 and 2012, many early Bitcoin users—including Satoshi—used personal email accounts as digital vaults, storing private keys, documents, and instructions. At that time, there were no modern custodial apps; email was a practical tool for keeping digital secrets.
All evidence suggests that Satoshi designed an encrypted digital legacy—a kind of “game” meant for whoever could decipher his clues to claim the “chest”: his email.
And within that email, it is highly probable that there are private keys controlling around 1,096,000 BTC—one of the largest digital fortunes ever recorded—alongside unpublished documents and possibly instructions regarding Bitcoin’s future.
For more than 15 years, no one had found a single real clue.
This is the first verifiable discovery directly connecting Bitcoin’s code to the digital identity of its creator.
🌐 Global Implications
If this legacy is validated and legally unlocked, it would become one of the most significant events in cryptocurrency history:
📝 Historical: It would rewrite the narrative around Satoshi Nakamoto, showing that he didn’t vanish—he left a ciphered path to his legacy.
🧠 Philosophical: It would reveal profound aspects of his thinking—inheritance, digital succession, and knowledge transfer without intermediaries.
🏦 Financial: It could significantly impact global Bitcoin markets, as it involves more than a million BTC locked away.
⚖️ Legal: It would set an international precedent for digital inheritance, cryptography, and decentralized property rights.
🧠 My Personal Journey
My name Paul Alexander from a young age, I knew I didn’t fit into the traditional system. I was diagnosed with ADHD and ACC, which made me process information differently.
Bitcoin gave me purpose: to understand a system beyond governments and banks. For years I lived for Bitcoin, invested, failed, and kept going.
Today, after four years of intense research, I’m facing a discovery that could mark a before and after in Bitcoin’s history.
I don’t want to exploit this information irresponsibly—I want to ensure this legacy is rigorously studied and shared with the community when the legal time comes.
📢 What Comes Next
We are currently in formal talks with GMX to recover access legitimately, under digital inheritance principles. If negotiations fail, the most probable scenario will be filing a lawsuit against GMX.
Meanwhile, the Blockchain Association of Peru, together with El Club Blockchain, will launch an official academic investigation in collaboration with universities, experts, and professionals to analyze:
The cryptographic patterns found in Bitcoin’s code.
The philosophical meaning behind the message.
The legal and technical role of the email as a digital chest.
This discovery is not just mine—it belongs to Bitcoin’s history and the global community.
Today, just like in the times of the Incas and pirates, we’ve found a map.
And we are one step away from opening the largest digital treasure chest in history.
✨ We may be standing before the greatest discovery in Bitcoin’s history: the potential unlocking of Satoshi Nakamoto’s encrypted legacy and his 1,096,000 BTC.
This isn’t just about money. It’s history, philosophy, technology, and humanity encoded in a blockchain.
Document legalized by a Peruvian notary that supports the investigation
https://x.com/PAUllleXz/status/1976795786798415941PAUl aleXander
paullex2099@proton.me