Jamaica Gleaner

British high court rules Australian not mysterious bitcoin founder as he claims

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BRITAIN’S HIGH court ruled on Thursday that an Australian computer scientist is not, as he claimed, the mysterious creator of the bitcoin cryptocurr­ency.

Craig Wright has for eight years claimed that he was the man behind ‘Satoshi Nakamoto’, the pseudonym that masked the identity of the creator of bitcoin.

His claim was dismissed by Justice James Mellor following a trial brought forward by the Crypto Open Patent Alliance, a non-profit group of technology and cryptocurr­ency firms.

The organisati­on claimed Wright had created an “elaborate false narrative” and forged documents to suggest he was Satoshi and had “terrorised” those who questioned him.

Wright, who attended the start of the five-week trial, denied the allegation­s.

At stake was not just bragging rights to the creation of bitcoin, the world’s most popular virtual currency, but control of the intellectu­al property rights.

Wright has used his claim as bitcoin’s inventor to file litigation to drive developers away from further developing the opensource technology, the alliance claimed in their lawsuit. The ruling will clearly impact three pending lawsuits that Wright has filed based on his claim to having the intellectu­al property rights to bitcoin.

The murky origins of bitcoin date to the height of the financial crisis in 2008. A paper authored by a person or group using the Nakamoto pen name explained how digital currency could be sent around the world anonymousl­y, without banks or national currencies. Nakamoto seemed to vanish three years later.

Speculatio­n on the true identity swirled for years, and the names of several candidates had emerged when Wright first surfaced to claim the identity in 2016, only to quickly return to the shadows, saying he didn’t “have the courage” to provide more proof.

Bitcoin is the world’s most high-profile digital currency, and like others is not tied to any bank or government. Like cash, it allows users to spend and receive money anonymousl­y, or mostly so. It can be converted to cash when deposited into accounts at prices set in online trading.

Supporters say it can be more trustworth­y than traditiona­l money, which can be vulnerable to the whims of those in power. Sceptics say the volatility of cryptocurr­encies has introduced a potential new risk to the global financial system, and fret about their potential to promote illicit activities and introduce uncertaint­y.

 ?? AP ?? Dr Craig Wright arrives at the Federal Courthouse on November 16, 2021, in Miami.
AP Dr Craig Wright arrives at the Federal Courthouse on November 16, 2021, in Miami.

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