Skip to content

CryptoVert Blockchain App for iOS

Bitcoin, NFTs, News, and more!

Primary Menu
  • Crypto
  • Blockchain
  • NFT’s
  • Videos
  • Download App
  • Home
  • Crypto
  • My Friend, Satoshi?
  • Crypto

My Friend, Satoshi?

cryptovert October 8, 2024 6 min read

An
HBO
documentary
coming
out
Tuesday
has
reopened

speculation

that
my
late
friend

Len
Sassaman

was
Satoshi
Nakamoto,
the
pseudonymous
inventor
of
Bitcoin.
The
filmmaker

claims

to
have
confronted
the
person
he
believes
is
Satoshi
face-to-face,
which
would
make
it
unlikely
Len,
who
committed
suicide
in
2011,
is
his
suspect.
Nevertheless,
others
have
written
convincingly
and
at
length
about

Len’s
technical
chops

that
made
him
a
logical
Satoshi
candidate.

Whatever
the
film
claims,
I’d
like
to
share
the
Len
that
I
knew,
and
why
I,
too,
think
it’s
plausible
that
he
was
Satoshi.


Justin
Newton
is
the
CEO
of
Netki,
a
provider
of
identity
validation
services.
This
article
is
adapted
from
a



post


published
on
LinkedIn.

When
I
met
Len
Sassaman,
he
was
wearing
a
rumpled
jacket
and
tie.
We
were
in
history
teacher

Thomas
Ruth
‘s
living
room
at

the
Hill
School
,
a
boarding
school
in
Pottstown,
Pa..
Len
was
in
his
junior
year,
and
I,
an
alumnus
working
in
the
data
center
business,
was
back
from
the
San
Francisco
Bay
Area
to
visit
Tom
for
a
long
weekend.

Len
sat
on
the
couch.
I
was
in
a
nearby
chair.
Tom,
one
of
my
mentors,
was
known
for
taking
kids
under
his
wing
who
had
a
difficult
upbringing
or
a
hard
time
fitting
in.
Len
was
one
such
kid.
He
was
having
trouble
keeping
regular
eye
contact
and
would
greatly
downplay
his
achievements.

Even
though
he
was
only
16,
Len
showed
great
promise
as
a
computer
scientist,
and
Tom
asked
if
I
would
be
willing
to
be
a
friend
in
the
field
who
could
help
Len
find
his
footing
and
his
way.
I
owe
a
lot
to
Tom,
so
of
course
I
agreed.
That
first
day
we
spent
about
two
and
a
half
hours
in
Tom’s
living
room,
drinking
hot
tea
that
was
the
equivalent
of
Jolt
Cola,
because
it
had
all
of
the
sugar,
and
twice
the
caffeine
that
you
would
expect
in
a
teacup.

As
I
look
back
on
that
conversation,
I
remember
a
number
of
things
we
discussed
that
day,
and
in
retrospect,
Len’s
ideas
aligned
well
with
who
Satoshi
Nakamoto
was
(or
is).

Another
mentor
of
mine
had
pointed
out
to
me
how
technology
and
history
influenced
each
other
in
cycles,
and
how
great
inventions
change
society
and
change
the
world.
I
shared
this
eureka
moment
with
Len:
that
great
skill
in
tech
could
be
the
lever
that,
if
pulled
hard
enough,
can
move
the
world
in
the
direction
we
want
it
to
go.

This
was
the
moment
in
the
discussion
when
Len
went
from
being
passive,
shy,
and
reserved,
to
passionate
and
deeply
engaged.
Until
that
point,
he
had
lived
in
a
world
that
was
shaped
by
the
popular
kids;
seeing
a
path
where
he
could
help
shape
the
future,
without
having
to
be
in
the
limelight,
caused
a
striking
and
immediate
change
in
his
posture,
from
slouching
to
erect
and
leaning
forward
and
his
eyes
from
downcast
to
wide
open
and
looking
directly
at
me.

At
this
point,
Tom
sat
back
in
his
chair
with
a
knowing
smile
on
his
face,
occasionally
getting
up
to
make
sure
Len
and
I
both
had
full
cups
of
his
infamous
rocket
fuel
to
keep
the
conversation
going.
We
spent
the
next
several
hours
talking
about
the
importance
of
freedom
of
communication,
online
anonymity,
and
democratization
of
information.
The
conversation
included
developing
open
source
software
and
standards,
expressing
our
values
through
code,
and
creating
software
that
could
change
the
world,
and
predicting
some
of
those
impacts.



Read
more:



Polymarket
Bettors
Say
HBO
Documentary
Will
Name
Len
Sassaman
as
Satoshi
Nakamoto

The
Silicon
Valley
Years

Shortly
after
I
moved
to
Los
Angeles
to
work
at
NetZero,
an
internet
service
provider,
Len
moved
to
San
Francisco.
I
introduced
him
to
my
friends
in
the
North
American
Network
Operators’
Group

(NANOG
)
and
Internet
Engineering
Task
Force
(IETF)
communities,
connecting
him
to
my
tribe
on
the
path
to
him
finding
his
own.

We
stayed
in
relatively
close
contact
for
about
10
years
after
that.
We
wouldn’t
talk
for
a
while,
and
then
I’d
get
an
email
or
a
text
message
asking
“Do
you
have
time
for
a
call?”
with
no
context.
Some
of
those
calls
were
quick
questions
about
career
advice
as
he
was
considering
job
offers,
or
whether
he
should
stay
at
a
role
that
wasn’t
fully
engaging
to
him.
Those
were
usually
quick
calls
because
he
just
needed
someone
he
trusted
in
the
field
to
validate
what
he
was
thinking
or
seeing.

The
longer
calls
were
similar
to
the
conversations
on
Tom’s
couch.
We
spent
hours
talking
about
the
value
of
open
and
permissionless
innovation,
and
how
important
the
networks
were
that
allowed
people
to
build
without
having
to
ask
permission.

We
talked
for
hours
about
the
trade-offs
of
allowing
bad
actors
to
do
bad
things
versus
the
benefit
of
letting
good
actors
move
quickly
without
waiting
for
slow,
conservative
institutions
to
say
yes.

Ultimately,
we
agreed
that
the
networks
themselves
should
be
completely
open,
and
that
the
controls
should
be
built
at
other
layers,
either
with
technology,
whenever
possible,
or
with
law
when
absolutely
necessary.

This
principle
sits
at
the
core
of
Bitcoin,
and
is
perhaps
its
most
valuable
and
enduring
characteristic.



Read
more:



HBO
Is
Joining
Search
for
Bitcoin’s
Satoshi.
Past
Attempts
Haven’t
Turned
Out
Great.

Satoshi?
Maybe

There
are
many
people
who
give
logical
reasons
that
Len
could
not
have
been
Satoshi,
but
in
my
view,
those
people
don’t
know
who
Len
was.
Here
are
my
responses
to
their
points:


  • “Len
    wasn’t
    rich,
    and
    his
    family
    isn’t
    rich
    now.”

    Len
    believed
    that
    the
    purpose
    of
    working
    in
    technology
    was
    not
    to
    get
    rich,
    but
    instead
    to
    create
    the
    future
    we
    all
    want
    to
    live
    in.
    This
    would
    tie
    in
    well
    with
    the
    fact
    that
    Satoshi
    never
    profited
    from
    Bitcoin
    the
    way
    he
    or
    she
    or
    they
    could
    have,
    given
    that
    the
    coins
    mined
    by
    Bitcoin’s
    creator
    haven’t
    moved.
    I
    can
    100%
    see
    Len
    destroying
    the
    private
    keys
    to
    his
    mining
    wallets
    to
    ensure
    he
    or
    anyone
    else
    couldn’t
    cash
    in
    on
    what
    he
    did.


  • “Len
    was
    a
    Bitcoin
    skeptic
    and
    critical
    of
    it
    on
    Twitter.”

    Len
    was
    frequently
    highly
    critical
    of
    the
    projects
    he
    was
    deeply
    involved
    in.
    One
    of
    the
    ways
    his
    personality
    played
    itself
    out
    was
    to
    believe
    that
    his
    work
    wasn’t
    good
    enough,
    even
    when
    it
    was
    incredible.
    Publicizing
    those
    criticisms
    would
    be
    a
    good
    way
    for
    him
    to
    keep
    the
    anonymity
    and
    distance
    he
    would
    have
    sought
    if
    he
    were
    indeed
    Satoshi.



Read
more:



Len
Sassaman
Gets
the
Memecoin
Treatment
Ahead
of
HBO
Bitcoin
Creator
Documentary

Some
other
points:

  • Len
    was
    a
    strong
    believer
    in
    building
    open
    and
    permissionless
    networks
    for
    innovation.
    It
    was
    this
    feature
    of
    Bitcoin
    that
    originally
    drew
    me
    to
    it,
    and
    I
    would
    not
    be
    surprised
    if
    Len
    built
    a
    network
    like
    that.

  • Len
    was
    100%
    a
    believer
    in
    the
    rights
    of
    the
    individual
    over
    the
    power
    of
    authority.
    At
    the
    same
    time,
    he
    was
    not
    the
    type
    of
    libertarian
    who
    flocked
    to
    the
    early
    Bitcoin
    community.
    I
    can
    definitely
    see
    that
    if
    he
    were
    Satoshi,
    watching
    his
    creation
    get
    co-opted
    by
    get-rich-quick
    types
    could
    have
    led
    him
    to
    walk
    away
    from
    the
    project
    and
    possibly
    heighten
    his
    depression.

To
be
clear:
Len
and
I
never
discussed
Bitcoin
and
if
he
was
Satoshi
I
can
readily
see
why
he
wouldn’t
want
to
discuss
it
with
me
or
any
of
our
friends.
At
the
end
of
the
day,
I
have
no
idea
if
he
was
Satoshi.
He
certainly
could
have
been,
considering
both
his
skills
and
who
he
was
as
a
person.

In
any
case,
Len
was
a
wonderful
person
who
deserved
better
than
the
world
treated
him.
His
memory
shines
brightly
in
my
heart.


Thanks
to



Carl
Jay
Pardini
,
one
of
Len’s
close
high
school
friends,
for
reviewing
and
fact
checking
this
article.



Note:
The
views
expressed
in
this
column
are
those
of
the
author
and
do
not
necessarily
reflect
those
of
CoinDesk,
Inc.
or
its
owners
and
affiliates.

Edited
by
Marc
Hochstein.

Continue Reading

Previous: Ethereum Proposal Could Increase Throughput by 50%
Next: MicroStrategy Surges to 6-Month High as Bitcoin Wrestles With Key Moving Average

Related Stories

Asia Morning Briefing: GENIUS Act Positions ETH at the Center of Tokenized Finance, Says Wall Street Veteran
4 min read
  • Crypto

Asia Morning Briefing: GENIUS Act Positions ETH at the Center of Tokenized Finance, Says Wall Street Veteran

June 18, 2025
U.S. Senate Passes GENIUS Act to Regulate Stablecoins, Marking Crypto Industry Win
3 min read
  • Crypto

U.S. Senate Passes GENIUS Act to Regulate Stablecoins, Marking Crypto Industry Win

June 18, 2025
Tron Inc. Deal Gives Justin Sun’s Father Control of Public Firm Via $100M Token Deal
2 min read
  • Crypto

Tron Inc. Deal Gives Justin Sun’s Father Control of Public Firm Via $100M Token Deal

June 18, 2025

You may have missed

Asia Morning Briefing: GENIUS Act Positions ETH at the Center of Tokenized Finance, Says Wall Street Veteran
4 min read
  • Crypto

Asia Morning Briefing: GENIUS Act Positions ETH at the Center of Tokenized Finance, Says Wall Street Veteran

June 18, 2025
Tron Inc. Deal Gives Justin Sun’s Father Control of Public Firm Via $100M Token Deal
2 min read
  • Crypto

Tron Inc. Deal Gives Justin Sun’s Father Control of Public Firm Via $100M Token Deal

June 18, 2025
U.S. Senate Passes GENIUS Act to Regulate Stablecoins, Marking Crypto Industry Win
3 min read
  • Crypto

U.S. Senate Passes GENIUS Act to Regulate Stablecoins, Marking Crypto Industry Win

June 18, 2025
JPMorgan Introduces USD Deposit Token on Coinbase’s Base Blockchain
1 min read
  • Crypto

JPMorgan Introduces USD Deposit Token on Coinbase’s Base Blockchain

June 18, 2025
  • Crypto
  • Blockchain
  • NFT’s
  • Videos
  • Download App
Copyright © All rights reserved. | MoreNews by AF themes.