TL;DR
- NYT investigation: A new report examines linguistic patterns suggesting Adam Back could be Satoshi but stops short of confirming the identity, relying on cypherpunk archives and writing traits.
- Carreyrouās findings: The journalist highlights Adam Backās early posts outlining Bitcoin-like features and his tense reaction in a 2024 documentary, though Adam Back continues to deny the claim.
- Ongoing mystery: Other suspects, past denials, and court rulings against false claimants underscore how the search for Satoshi remains unresolved.
The New York Times published an investigative report suggesting that British cryptographer Adam Back may be Satoshi Nakamoto, pointing to similarities in writing patterns found across cypherpunk mailing list archives. The report draws on 134,308 posts but stops short of declaring Adam Back the creator of the $1.4 trillion cryptocurrency. Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist John Carreyrou spent a year reviewing decades-old internet posts, court filings, and email caches to build his case, narrowing a pool of 620 early contributors to a single figure based on linguistic traits.
Carreyrouās Method and Early Clues
Carreyrou wrote that he identified specific writing tics, including hyphenation habits and spelling variations, that led him toward Adam Back. His investigation began with a moment in the 2024 HBO documentary “Money Electric: The Bitcoin Mystery,” where Adam Back appeared tense when his name surfaced as a possible Satoshi candidate. Carreyrou said his experience in detecting deception made the reaction notable, prompting him to examine the cypherpunk archives where Adam Back had been active since 1995.
Claims Rooted in Cypherpunk History
According to the report, Carreyrou found that Adam Back outlined all five core features of Bitcoin in 1997 posts, years before the white paper. He described an electronic cash system disconnected from modern banking, preserving privacy, operating on a distributed network, maintaining scarcity, and requiring no trust in banks. Carreyrou also noted that Adam Back anticipated elements of the Byzantine Generals Problem and proposed using Hashcash to mint Wei Daiās b-money, both of which were later cited by Satoshi.
Denials and Missing Responses
Despite the findings, Back has consistently denied being Satoshi. In the HBO documentary, he rejected the claim and asked that the discussion remain off the record. Carreyrou wrote that Adam Back did not respond to two email requests for metadata related to documents produced during the Craig Wright trial.
i'm not satoshi, but I was early in laser focus on the positive societal implications of cryptography, online privacy and electronic cash, hence my ~1992 onwards active interest in applied research on ecash, privacy tech on cypherpunks list which led to hashcash and other ideas.
— Adam Back (@adam3us) April 8, 2026
Other Suspects and Longstanding Mysteries
The NYT report notes that this is not the first attempt to identify Satoshi. The HBO film previously highlighted Peter Todd, who denied the claim. Other figures, including Nick Szabo, Hal Finney, and Len Sassaman, have been considered. Meanwhile, Craig Wright was found by a UK court to have lied extensively about being Satoshi. The true creator, believed to hold more than 5% of all BTC, has not been heard from since 2011.





