sgk
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April 18, 2015, 12:09:12 PM |
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Quote is from another thread but I'd rather not derail that one so I'm starting a new thread: If he cashing out his bitcoin, he may exposure himself, his identity will be revealed, which he didn't like it. So I think he may never cashing out his bitcoin.
Why is it always assumed that Satoshi choosing to dump his coins would be immediately noticeable? Satoshi was the first to mine and sometimes the only one mining in the very early days but others like Hal Finney were mining too. After 2010, many other people jumped aboard and started mining with their own PCs. Satoshi was still around on the forums until late 2010 and didn't disappear completely until 2011. If he had continued mining until then (and possibly even after 2010-2011) then it would be impossible to know whether it's Satoshi who is dumping his coins or just another early adopter. Someone who constantly mined on a PC with reasonable specs from 2010 onwards would still have made enough BTC to call themselves filthy rich. I'm not doubting that Satoshi's earliest mined coins that were worth billions at one stage were left untouched but couldn't it be possible that he still sold a couple million dollars worth of BTC and is living the high life today? Either way, it's noticeable. Every transaction sent to and from his addresses are traceable and wouldn't even be mixable. Certainly, every transaction from his 'known' addresses will be traceable. But in that case we are assuming that we are aware of Satoshi's all addresses. OP's point is: how do you know each and every of Satoshi's addresses? If Satoshi continued to mine in 2010 and 2011 when there were several other early adopters mining bitcoin, how would you identify some specific addresses belonging to Satoshi out of those?
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CoinFriend
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April 18, 2015, 12:16:20 PM |
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First of all the following questions needs to be answered:
1. Is Satoshi a single person, or a group of individuals? 2. In case he is a single individual, is he alive now? 3. Has he kept all those coins which he had mined in 2009, or has he thrown them away? 4. In case he is in the possession of the coins which he mined, how many coins he is having right now? 5. Has he lost any of his coins in the millions of Bitcoin-related scams? (such as Mt Gox).
You should ask Chuck Norris
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sgk
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April 18, 2015, 12:26:44 PM |
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First of all the following questions needs to be answered:
1. Is Satoshi a single person, or a group of individuals? 2. In case he is a single individual, is he alive now? 3. Has he kept all those coins which he had mined in 2009, or has he thrown them away? 4. In case he is in the possession of the coins which he mined, how many coins he is having right now? 5. Has he lost any of his coins in the millions of Bitcoin-related scams? (such as Mt Gox).
You should ask Chuck Norris Now THAT is some theory: Chuck Norris is Satoshi!!
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ShetKid
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April 18, 2015, 12:32:59 PM |
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Do we even know all his bitcoin addresses ? He might have had coins mined to different addresses. And in the start he sent bitcoins to other people just for showing them the concept, and he might have 100's of other wallets he might have used to send bitcoins to himself to.
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cakir
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April 18, 2015, 12:33:52 PM |
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Well, there's an approximation about Satoshi's bitcoins. Some people says it's aroun 1 mil (~900k) Let's say satoshi was mining at first 50k blocks. How to detect if they're satoshi's or not? it's kinda easy. If the generated coins moved or not? If they're not moved (except Hal - Satoshi transactions) then we can assume those coins are satoshi's. Of course there're some non-moved bitcoins because some people mined and then screw it and never looked back. If we search all of the first 100k blocks and generated coins we can find all of satoshi's bitcoins (I guess).
I've manually checked some of the first blocks and each block was mined by different address not the same one. So satoshi has a least 20k different address. It's hard to track but it'll take attention when they're moved.
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guybrushthreepwood
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April 18, 2015, 12:34:45 PM |
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First of all the following questions needs to be answered:
1. Is Satoshi a single person, or a group of individuals? 2. In case he is a single individual, is he alive now? 3. Has he kept all those coins which he had mined in 2009, or has he thrown them away? 4. In case he is in the possession of the coins which he mined, how many coins he is having right now? 5. Has he lost any of his coins in the millions of Bitcoin-related scams? (such as Mt Gox).
And these are sadly all questions that will very likely never be answered. I'm on the fence as to whether I would want to know the answers to them as well. I kinda like the mystery of nobody knowing who satoshi is and it may be better that he stays unknown so bitcoin doesn't have a central figure to attack or degrade. Also satoshi dumping his coins would very likely crash the price but at the same time if he spent or exchanged them wisely he could avoid doing this whilst also doing some real good in the world with his coins. Only time will tell what happens I guess.
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fryarminer
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April 18, 2015, 12:53:13 PM |
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I'm pretty sure that if Satoshi needed to spend his Bitcoin he would. The fact that he leaves some of his addresses untouched adds value to that address and adds mystery to his existence. But he probably has many coin in circulation and is probably still mining. He's probably still active on the blogs! I doubt very seriously that he isn't making ends meet after he invented Bitcoin.
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johnyj
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April 18, 2015, 12:56:19 PM |
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Central banks never cash out majority of their gold holdings. It will be so stupid to exchange hard assets for some fiat paper that they can print any time
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countryfree
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April 18, 2015, 12:57:57 PM |
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Correction: it should be why do some people assume...
I don't assume anything about Satoshi, nor do I ever think about him (or her).
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I used to be a citizen and a taxpayer. Those days are long gone.
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CoinFriend
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April 18, 2015, 01:00:59 PM |
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Correction: it should be why do some people assume...
I don't assume anything about Satoshi, nor do I ever think about him (or her).
*or them
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--Encrypted--
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hee-ho.
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April 18, 2015, 01:03:51 PM |
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Correction: it should be why do some people assume...
I don't assume anything about Satoshi, nor do I ever think about him (or her).
*or them or IT. Satoshi might be an AI for all we know. edits my other post
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yatsey87
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April 18, 2015, 01:14:39 PM |
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Central banks never cash out majority of their gold holdings. It will be so stupid to exchange hard assets for some fiat paper that they can print any time
Satoshi isn't a central bank though and cannot print his money, though at one point he may wish to actually use his coins and pay or buy something substantial. Maybe a mansion? And I think most mansion-owners don't accept bitcoins as far as I'm aware (though hopefully they will in the future).
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johnyj
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April 18, 2015, 02:17:52 PM Last edit: April 18, 2015, 02:35:18 PM by johnyj |
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Central banks never cash out majority of their gold holdings. It will be so stupid to exchange hard assets for some fiat paper that they can print any time
Satoshi isn't a central bank though and cannot print his money, though at one point he may wish to actually use his coins and pay or buy something substantial. Maybe a mansion? And I think most mansion-owners don't accept bitcoins as far as I'm aware (though hopefully they will in the future). Satoshi's achievement is much larger than any central bank, those banks can only control their own currency through a debt scam This kind of post shows the author lacks financial experience. Rich people don't need cash, but rather accumulating assets (In fact that's what banks are doing every day). But physical assets always have a risk of being heavily taxed or confiscated. Since bitcoin is the most liquid form of digital assets, satoshi need very small amount of other assets, if any. http://www.arcticstartup.com/2014/09/01/estonian-bitcoin-castleBut what can you do with such a mansion? And, I guess he already spent large amount of coins, just not those 1 million coins, which might be lost (Otherwise they will be consolidated into one or several wallets, not spreading among thousands of wallets)
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fryarminer
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April 18, 2015, 04:08:49 PM |
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Has anyone ever thought of the fact that since Satoshi couldn't really avoid pre-mining (although it isn't really pre-mining but there were very few people mining the first blocks) he has voluntarily "frozen" the coins to make it fair to others? This does fit into his principles and philosophy..
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pawel7777
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Up to 300% + 200 FS deposit bonuses
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April 18, 2015, 04:39:00 PM |
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Has anyone ever thought of the fact that since Satoshi couldn't really avoid pre-mining (although it isn't really pre-mining but there were very few people mining the first blocks) he has voluntarily "frozen" the coins to make it fair to others? This does fit into his principles and philosophy..
If that was his intention, he could've done it the better way, as we don't know whether those coins are really 'frozen'. Sending them to the address, such as this one, would leave no doubts: 1BitcoinEaterAddressDontSendf59kuE He could've also do a massive giveaway on early stage, before Bitcoin was tradeable for USD.
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