A detailed investigative report by The New York Times has focused attention on Adam Back, the CEO of Blockstream, as the top candidate for the identity behind Satoshi Nakamoto, the pseudonymous creator of Bitcoin. The investigation, which spanned a year, applied large-scale analysis of archived mailing lists and writing style assessments to reach its findings.
Advanced linguistic analysis shapes investigation findings
Adam Back, a British cryptographer known for inventing the Hashcash proof-of-work algorithm cited in the Bitcoin white paper, attracted attention after an extensive examination of digital communications by the NYT team. Led by investigative journalist John Carreyrou and AI editor Dylan Freedman, the process covered over 134,000 posts from three major cryptography mailing lists active from 1992 to 2008.
Three separate stylometric analyses were applied to compare Satoshi’s writings with those from over 600 individuals who discussed digital currency concepts. Each method reportedly pinpointed Back as the closest stylistic match to Satoshi’s documented communication.
One analytic component identified unusual hyphenation errors and other grammatical quirks, revealing that Back shared more of these distinctive features with Satoshi than any other candidate. The screening process also filtered users for British spelling, familiar formatting, and shifting terminology, which further narrowed the pool of candidates until only Back remained.
The investigation’s approach was supported by collaboration with academic stylometry experts, including Florian Cafiero, who previously assisted in unmasking the authors of QAnon. However, some involved in the study considered the results inconclusive, pointing to Hal Finney as another key candidate.
Technical overlap and public denials draw further attention
The analysis noted that Back discussed nearly all of Bitcoin’s core elements on cryptography mailing lists between 1997 and 1999, a decade before the Bitcoin white paper surfaced. Back also suggested combining Hashcash with concepts from b-money, a proposal echoed in Satoshi’s eventual framework.
After Satoshi introduced Bitcoin in 2008, Back became notably less active on relevant forums and did not publicly comment on Bitcoin until June 2011, shortly after Satoshi’s own disappearance from public view. While Back later referenced participation in early Bitcoin discussions, NYT reporters did not locate evidence of this in mailing list archives.
Adam Back, who currently leads Blockstream, a prominent blockchain company focused on scaling Bitcoin and blockchain infrastructure, addressed the mounting speculation directly. Blockstream is also the parent of Bitcoin Standard Treasury Company (BSTR), which holds a significant Bitcoin reserve and has plans to merge with Cantor Equity Partners through a public listing.
Back has repeatedly dismissed speculation that he is Satoshi Nakamoto. When presented with the NYT findings, he attributed similarities to overlapping interests and a substantial history of contributions to cryptographic discussions. On X (Twitter), Back explained that his prolific activity and early focus on privacy were factors likely to create statistical similarities with Satoshi’s posts.
“It’s not me, but I take what you’re saying that this is what the A.I. said with the data. But it’s still not me,” wrote Back in a social media response.
He further commented that the anonymity of Satoshi continues to benefit Bitcoin’s image as a decentralized and neutral asset. With BSTR’s pending public listing, the matter also raises potential regulatory considerations, since confirmation of Satoshi’s identity could be considered material information under U.S. securities law.
Despite advanced analysis, the mystery surrounding Satoshi’s identity remains unresolved. Stylometric matches are not conclusive in the absence of on-chain cryptographic proof from Satoshi’s wallet addresses.
- The New York Times highlighted Adam Back as the leading candidate for Satoshi Nakamoto after year-long analysis.
- Back denied the findings, attributing linguistic similarities to his early and prolific cryptography activity.
- The investigation renewed debate over Satoshi’s identity, but definitive confirmation remains elusive without cryptographic proof.



