Just finished watching HBO's Money Electric documentary and honestly, the whole Len Sassaman angle is wild. For those not familiar, Len Sassaman was this legendary cryptographer who got deep into the cypherpunk movement back in San Francisco. The guy was seriously talented - worked on PGP, GNU Privacy Guard, all the foundational privacy tech we use today.



Here's where it gets interesting. Len Sassaman co-founded Osogato with his wife Meredith Patterson, and was pursuing his PhD in electrical engineering at KU Leuven when he passed away in 2011 at just 31 years old. But the documentary is now floating this theory that Len Sassaman could have actually been Satoshi Nakamoto, the mysterious Bitcoin creator. And I gotta say, some of the evidence is pretty compelling.

Think about it - Len Sassaman had the cryptographic expertise, the academic credentials, the right timeline. There's linguistic analysis suggesting similarities between his writing style and Nakamoto's. Plus, Nakamoto went completely silent around two months before Len Sassaman's death. The timing is suspicious, right?

One detail that caught everyone's attention: Len Sassaman apparently left a suicide note with 24 random words. The crypto community immediately started connecting dots with 24-word seed phrases used in crypto wallets. Coincidence? Maybe. But it's the kind of detail that fuels speculation.

That said, not everyone's convinced. Len Sassaman's own wife doesn't believe he was Satoshi. And there's the elephant in the room - Nakamoto's Bitcoin stash has never moved. Those early holdings are worth an absolutely massive amount at this point, and they've just sat dormant for over a decade.

What's wild is that Len Sassaman's contributions to cryptography are massive regardless of whether he created Bitcoin or not. The guy literally shaped how privacy works in the digital world. But now with this documentary making waves, everyone's rehashing the Satoshi mystery all over again.

Personally? I think the mystery is part of what makes Bitcoin fascinating. Whether Len Sassaman was actually Satoshi or just another brilliant cryptographer lost too soon, his legacy is undeniable. The documentary definitely reignited conversations about who Satoshi really was though. What's your take on all this?
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