3rd Jun 2022

The Deep State (NSA) Created Bitcoin

The mystery behind the creator of Bitcoin and their over $54 billion stake has captured public attention once more, as a court case in Florida seeks to verify the creator's identity — an unlikely effort toward unraveling an enigma that has been over a decade in the making.

The family of a deceased man, David Kleiman, is claiming their family member helped create the popular digital currency and is suing Kleiman's alleged business partner in the endeavor, Craig Wright, for half of Satoshi Nakemoto's 1.1 million cache of Bitcoin.

For the past five years, Wright has been claiming on and off that he created Bitcoin, but has failed to provide any proof of his ownership.

The creator could easily prove their identity by moving even a fraction of the cache of Bitcoin, or using the private key that controls the account.

In 2008, the first inklings of bitcoin began to circulate the web.

On January 3, 2009, 30,000 lines of code spelled out the beginning of Bitcoin. In August 2008, the domain name bitcoin.org was quietly registered online. Two months later, a paper entitled 'Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System' was passed around a cryptography mailing list.

The paper is the first instance of the mysterious figure, Satoshi Nakamoto's appearance on the web, and permanently links the name "Satoshi Nakamoto" to the cryptocurrency.

In 2010, a handful of merchants started accepting bitcoin in lieu of established currencies.

One of the first tangible items ever purchased with the cryptocurrency was a pizza.

In 2011, the Silk Road, an online marketplace for illegal drugs, launched. It used bitcoin as its chief form of currency.

Two years later, the mysterious figure known as "Satoshi Nakamoto" disappeared from the web.

On April 23, 2011, Nakamoto sent Bitcoin Core developer Mike Hearn a brief email.

"I've moved on to other things," he said, referring to the Bitcoin project. The future of Bitcoin, he wrote, was "in good hands."

In the course of determining the identity of Nakamoto, there's one person who has been thumbed again and again: hyper-secretive cryptocurrency expert Nick Szabo, who was not only fundamental to the development of Bitcoin, but also created his own cryptocurrency called "bit gold" in the late '90s.

In 2014, a team of linguistic researchers studied Nakamoto's writings alongside those of thirteen potential bitcoin creators. The results, they said, were indisputable.

"The number of linguistic similarities between Szabo's writing and the Bitcoin whitepaper is uncanny," the researchers reported, "none of the other possible authors were anywhere near as good of a match."

A story in the New York Times pegged Szabo as Bitcoin's creator, as well. Szabo, a staunch libertarian who has spoken publicly about the history of Bitcoin and blockchain technology, has been involved in cryptocurrency since its earliest beginnings.

Szabo firmly denied these claims, both in The New York times story and in a tweet: "Not Satoshi, but thank you."

The Wikipedia entry on Satoshi Nakamoto names at least 13 potential candidates as being responsible for the creation of Bitcoin.

It's been over a decade since Bitcoin's creation, and we're still not any closer to confirming who invented it.

Why would the inventor of the world's most important cryptocurrency choose to remain anonymous?

Why would someone go to all the trouble of creating a decentralized currency without sticking around to receive any of the credit?

They're a genius

In a New Yorker article from 2011, a top internet security researcher describes Bitcoin code as an inscrutable execution that nears perfection: "Only the most paranoid, painstaking coder in the world could avoid making mistakes."

They speak fluent English

Nakamoto has written extensively about Bitcoin, authoring close to 80,000 words on the subject in the course of two years. His work reads like that of a native English speaker.

They might be more than one person

The foolproof brilliance of Bitcoin's code have left many wondering if it isn't the work of a team of developers. Bitcoin security researcher Dan Kaminsky says Nakamoto "could be either a team of people or a genius."

Bitcoin is nothing more than a trojan horse of the establishment, designed to move people away from cash and gold, and towards digital currencies.

The basis for Bitcoin is first found on a paper written by three employees of the National Security Agency (NSA) Office of Information Security Research and Technology, Cryptology Division, in June 1996. The paper was titled: How to Make a Mint: The Cryptography of Anonymous Electronic Cash.

By W. E. Messamore

Digital currency bitcoin, which has experienced sudden growth in terms of usage and value, has been criticized by many and some have labelled it as a ponzi scheme.

Given its alleged use in drug trafficking, money laundering, terrorist financing and other anti-social activities, a number of states across the globe have warned consumers about the risks involved in relying on and using the decentralized money.

Now, a group that claims to track the activities of government organizations around the globe alleges that the popular cryptocurrency is a project run by the US National Security Agency (NSA), whose reputation has been hit by the revelations made by whistleblower Edward Snowden.

The group, named CIA Project, claims that bitcoin is made by the NSA or the CIA.

Who is the creator of Bitcoin? The mysterious Satoshi Nakamoto, who has written the Bitcoin Whitepaper, has never been identified. Since 2009, there have been many theories of whom created Bitcoin. Some even think the NSA created it.

They did create part of it for sure

SHA-256 is the secure hashing algorithm which is an essential part of Bitcoin’s architecture. It is an NSA hash function algorithm first published in 2001.

This is a really excellent lecture about SHA-256 and how it is used by the Bitcoin protocol, because it’s very technical (instead of using metaphors to describe how Bitcoin works), and someone who isn’t a computer nerd can take most of it in and understand what he’s saying: YouTube video

SHA-256 is a set of instructions designed and written by the United States National Security Agency (NSA) that tell a computer to follow a series of mathematical steps with any input, in the form of a string of information of any size.

One thing these steps do to an input every time is compress it into an output that is always a 256-bit value called a hash. The other is encrypt it: The mathematical operations in these steps and the values they use as operands cannot be done in reverse to find the input using the hash.

So the hash can be used as a fingerprint for the original data because it is impossible to guess what the output will be for any value before running it through SHA-256––

And the resulting hash appears completely random, but it is the result of a deterministic process that will produce the same hash for the same input every time.

So SHA-256 (secure hashing algorithm 256) is a cryptographic one-way compression function.

If you have the hash you can verify that someone else has the input value by running it through SHA-256 to see if you get the same hash. This specific hashing algorithm is an essential part of how Bitcoin works, as very eloquently explained by Antonopoulos in the lecture above.

Satoshi Nakamoto Means “Central Intelligence”

The Japanese term satoshi has many meanings. Among some other things, Satoshi means "enlightened", "wise" or "intelligent". And last, but not least, Nakamoto means something like "middle", "base", "root" or "central". This would make Satoshi Nakamoto the “Central Intelligence”

Now, this could be a giant coincidence, but it’s unlikely that it is one. What’s indisputable is that whoever created Bitcoin used “Central Intelligence” in Japanese as their moniker.

Of course, that’s not proof it’s the CIA that created Bitcoin.

It could have been the NSA that named Bitcoin’s pseudonymous creator “CIA” in Japanese as a joke or to throw people off the trail.

How a cryptocurrency benefits the Deep State:

The Deep State would want cryptocurrency to exist. As Bitcoin’s critics like to say, it’s something perfect for organizations that have clandestine operations (like the CIA is known to have).

It’s a way for the Deep State to have a financial infrastructure outside the watchful gaze and control of institutional finance on Wall Street or any other banks on the planet.

The Deep State would have loved to have cryptocurrency back during the Iran Contra affair with Oliver North, the Marine Lt. Col who ran a secret operation (maybe for Ronald Reagan himself) to move money from the Middle East to Nicaragua to financially support Contra rebels.

DOJ Cybercrimes Prosecutor Explains How BTC Helps The FBI Catch Criminals

Crypto makes it easier for the Deep State to hide what it’s doing, but it also makes it easier for them to see what criminals are doing.

Edward Snowden has always been a fierce critique of government surveillance. According to him, governments around the globe are employing highly sophisticated surveillance and monitoring systems to sort through the massive public ledgers.

Bitcoin’s public ledger is nothing less than a jackpot for such governments, and that is why they often leave no stone unturned and use state of the art monitoring techniques to keep an eye on it.

In this lecture about a cybercrime drama so fantastic it could be a fictional movie plot, a former DOJ cybercrimes prosecutor explains how useful the public record of accounts and transactions on the Bitcoin blockchain is for Deep State police investigating crimes. YouTube video

The thing about Bitcoin is it’s not private. It’s completely transparent. Every account, and every amount, and every transaction is all available on a giant, public document that is maintained on something like 10,000 different nodes.

On Bitcoin’s blockchain account info doesn’t hide behind a password that only a trusted institutional administrator has–– as with fiat banking. The Deep State, always keen on surveillance, has already made hay of this whether it created crypto or not.

Satoshi Nakamoto and the birth of Bitcoin is a saga shrouded in symbology that reads like a Dan Brown novel for cypherpunks. From the name assigned to the genesis block to the sudden disappearance of its creator, it’s hard to avoid the religious undertones. Aside from its name, there is the oddity of the genesis block taking six days to mine. As speculated in an old Bitcointalk forum thread, this may have been an Easter egg left by Satoshi in homage to the biblical account of creation. As Genesis 2:2 recounts: “And on the seventh day God ended his work which he had made; and he rested.”

For those interested in ascribing symbology to Satoshi’s actions, there’s more. Christ’s ministry on earth is believed to have lasted for around three years. Satoshi’s first known contact with the world occurred on August 22, 2008, in an email to b-money creator Wei Dai, though he is believed to have reached out to Adam Back before that. Satoshi’s final verified email was to Gavin Andresen on April 26, 2011, meaning that his ministry also lasted for around three years.

UPDATE: A Miami federal court jury decided Monday that a self-described Australian inventor of Bitcoin owed the estate of deceased Palm Beach County resident and computer forensics expert David Kleiman millions of dollars in compensation for the men’s business partnership between 2011 and 2013.

The jury, however, did not award Kleiman’s estate any of the original 1.1 million bitcoins, worth about $50 billion based on Monday’s value of the digital currency, the estate sought as part of its civil lawsuit. And the panel did not decide whether the Australian, Craig S. Wright, is in fact Bitcoin’s true creator.

Kleiman’s estate, represented by his brother, Ira, should be entitled to at least $33.3 million, based on the jury’s verdict. That’s a third of the $100 million worth of intellectual property rights the jury awarded to the entity David Kleiman and Wright had formed a decade ago and based on the late South Florida man’s ownership stake.

Lawyers representing Kleiman’s family were satisfied with the verdict.

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Resources:

  1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Satoshi
  2. ibtimes.co.uk
    http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/bitcoin-suspected-be-nsa-cia-project-1460439
  3. Your Bitcoins Open to CIA and Criminals, Heed Wikileaks' Warning 

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