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Exactly 15 years ago today, Satoshi Nakamoto posted one final message on December 13, 2010, and then vanished. No explanation. No farewell. Just gone. It's wild when you think about it—the person who created Bitcoin simply disappeared and never came back. People still wonder: is Satoshi Nakamoto alive? Does he still watch what Bitcoin became? We'll probably never know.
What's fascinating is how Bitcoin kept going without him. Like, it didn't need its creator to survive or thrive. The system just worked. That's the whole point of decentralization—you don't need a leader. You don't need permission. You don't need trust in a person. That's what makes Bitcoin different from every centralized financial system we've ever had.
Look at what happened in those 15 years. Bitcoin went from literally worthless to over 71K per coin right now, with a +4.60% pump today alone. The entire crypto market grew from basically nothing to occasionally hitting 4 trillion in total value. Banks started buying Bitcoin. Governments started thinking about digital currencies. Corporations added it to their balance sheets. What was once called a scam by everyone is now part of the mainstream financial conversation.
But here's the thing that gets me: Satoshi's million Bitcoin just sits there. Untouched. He never came back to cash out, never came back to control anything, never benefited from the trillion-dollar ecosystem he created. That's not normal. That's not how founders usually operate. It's almost like he knew that stepping back was the most important thing he could do for Bitcoin's future.
So when people ask if Satoshi Nakamoto is alive or what he's doing now, I think they're missing the point. Whether he's alive or not doesn't matter anymore. His absence is his legacy. He proved that an idea doesn't need its creator to change the world. Bitcoin doesn't need Satoshi. It never did. That's the real genius of it all.