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Searching for Satoshi Nakamoto: The Body of Bitcoin's First Recipient Has Been Cryogenically Frozen for 11 Years

Searching for Satoshi Nakamoto: The Body of Bitcoin's First Recipient Has Been Cryogenically Frozen for 11 Years

BitpushBitpush2025/08/29 21:16
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By:深潮 TechFlow

Author: David, TechFlow

Original Title: On This Day 11 Years Ago, the Man Who Might Be Satoshi Nakamoto Was Cryonically Preserved

On August 28, 2014, a man named Hal Finney passed away.

Afterwards, his body was sent to a cryonics facility in Arizona, USA. There, his remains were preserved in liquid nitrogen, awaiting the day when future medicine might "revive" the deceased.

Exactly 11 years have passed, but most people seem to have never heard of Hal Finney.

Yet in the crypto world, he may be one of the most important figures in bitcoin history:

Finney was the very first user of the entire bitcoin network, apart from its creator, Satoshi Nakamoto.

On January 3, 2009, a mysterious figure using the pseudonym "Satoshi Nakamoto" created bitcoin. Nine days later, Satoshi sent 10 bitcoins to Finney, marking the first transaction in bitcoin history. At that time, there were only two people on the entire network: Satoshi and Finney.

Today, bitcoin's market cap exceeds 1 trillion dollars. But in the beginning, this world-changing financial system was just an experiment in transferring value between two people.

In 2009, 53-year-old Finney saw Satoshi's bitcoin whitepaper and immediately recognized its revolutionary potential.

He downloaded and ran the bitcoin software, helping Satoshi fix bugs in the early code. Bitcoin's survival and development to this day owes much to Finney's contributions.

But in the same year bitcoin was born, Finney was diagnosed with ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis).

Searching for Satoshi Nakamoto: The Body of Bitcoin's First Recipient Has Been Cryogenically Frozen for 11 Years image 0

This disease gradually robs people of muscle control, eventually leading to total paralysis. Five years later, he passed away. He chose cryonics, hoping that future medicine could bring him back to life.

One of the ways he paid for the cryonics procedure was with bitcoin.

Eleven years later, on the 11th anniversary of Finney's death, it seems people have not truly forgotten this bitcoin pioneer.

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Someone posted an image of a Japanese kana chart on social media, using Satoshi Nakamoto's name as a clue, and, leveraging subtle similarities in the shapes of Eastern and Western characters, suggested that these kana, in their form and arrangement, point to Hal Finney's English name.

This kind of wordplay is easily dismissed as over-interpretation.

But interestingly, Finney was also a cryptographer, spending his life studying how to hide and encode information.

For him, embedding his real name in the pseudonym Satoshi Nakamoto would seem like an easily achievable intellectual game, another form of cypherpunk-style subtle expression.

However, Finney denied being Satoshi Nakamoto during his lifetime.

In 2013, almost completely paralyzed, he wrote on a forum: "I am not Satoshi Nakamoto." He also made public his email exchanges with Satoshi, showing two distinct personalities and writing styles.

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But after 2014, Satoshi gradually stopped posting on forums, and a year later, Finney's body was cryonically preserved in liquid nitrogen.

The Fake Satoshi's Neighbor

The discussion about "Finney possibly being Satoshi Nakamoto" also stems from some other noteworthy coincidences.

In March 2014, Newsweek published a report claiming to have found Satoshi Nakamoto. The journalist tracked down a Japanese-American man in Temple City, California, whose real name was Dorian Satoshi Nakamoto. After the article was published, media from around the world flocked to this quiet small town.

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But this was later proven to be a mistake. Dorian was an unemployed engineer who knew nothing about bitcoin. Satoshi himself, after seeing the report, made a rare return to the bitcoin forum after a long absence to clarify:

"I am not Dorian Nakamoto."

Searching for Satoshi Nakamoto: The Body of Bitcoin's First Recipient Has Been Cryogenically Frozen for 11 Years image 4

But interestingly, Hal Finney also lived in Temple City. He had lived there for 10 years, just a few blocks away from Dorian's house, which was besieged by the media.

This geographical coincidence also sparked speculation: Could Finney have borrowed his neighbor's name as a pseudonym?

The Japanese name Satoshi Nakamoto certainly fits the air of mystery Satoshi wanted to create. Of course, it could also be pure coincidence. However, Finney and Satoshi did have some overlap in their timelines.

Excluding the 2014 incident where Satoshi suddenly reappeared to clarify he wasn't Dorian, Satoshi's last public appearance on a forum was in April 2011. In an email, he wrote:

"I've moved on to other things." After that, he completely disappeared and never touched the millions of bitcoins in his wallet again.

Finney was diagnosed with ALS in August 2009. The disease progresses gradually: first the fingers become clumsy, then the arms, then the legs, and finally the whole body.

By the end of 2010, Finney's physical condition had clearly deteriorated. Satoshi's withdrawal and Finney's worsening illness overlapped in time; whether this is related is unknown.

Even more thought-provoking, in 2004, Finney created a system called RPOW. The core problem this system solved was precisely the key issue that bitcoin would later address:

How to prevent double-spending of digital currency without a central authority.

The Past of a Cryptography OG

OG stands for original gangster, which roughly translates to "old hand" or "veteran."

In the crypto industry, OG is more often used to refer to those who entered the space early, achieved much, and contributed greatly. But true OGs never call themselves OGs.

If you wanted to create bitcoin in 2008, there were probably only a few hundred people in the world capable of doing so. Hal Finney may have been one of them—a true cryptography OG.

This is not an exaggeration. Creating bitcoin required a rare combination:

Top-notch cryptographic skills, a deep understanding of distributed systems, familiarity with the history of digital currencies, and a steadfast belief in creating money free from government control.

Finney's story began in the early 1990s. At that time, the US government classified strong encryption as munitions and banned its export. A group of hackers calling themselves "cypherpunks" believed privacy was a basic human right and decided to fight regulation with code.

Against this backdrop, Phil Zimmermann created PGP (Pretty Good Privacy), a software that allowed ordinary people to use military-grade encryption. In 1991, Zimmermann released PGP's source code for free on the internet, causing a huge stir.

Finney was the second programmer Zimmermann recruited. At that time, PGP was still a rough prototype, and Finney's task was to rewrite the core encryption algorithm to make it faster and more secure.

Finney spent several months rewriting the entire encryption engine, giving PGP 2.0 a qualitative leap in speed.

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This experience made Finney a central figure in the cypherpunk movement.

At that time, cypherpunks believed that cryptography could reshape social power structures and return privacy rights to individuals. They exchanged ideas through a mailing list, discussing topics ranging from anonymous communication to digital cash.

Finney not only participated in discussions but also operated two anonymous remailers, allowing people to send messages while hiding their identities. In this community, creating a digital currency independent of government was a recurring dream.

In 2004, Finney proposed his own solution: RPOW (Reusable Proofs of Work).

His solution was this: users would generate a proof of work by expending computing power and send it to the RPOW server. After verification, instead of simply marking it as "used," the server would generate a new, equivalent RPOW token and return it to the user. The user could transfer this token to someone else, and the recipient could redeem a new token from the server.

Doesn't this sound a lot like bitcoin's proof of work?

However, RPOW ultimately did not achieve widespread adoption, but it proved one thing: digital scarcity can be created. You can use computing power to create digital tokens that cannot be forged and can circulate.

And four years later, on October 31, 2008, someone signing as Satoshi Nakamoto posted the bitcoin whitepaper on the same cypherpunk mailing list. Finney immediately realized what this meant.

"Bitcoin looks like a very promising idea," he replied to Satoshi's post.

Bitcoin solved the final problem that RPOW hadn't: complete decentralization. No servers needed, no one to trust, the entire network maintaining a shared ledger.

On January 3, 2009, the bitcoin genesis block was born. Finney downloaded the software and became the first person besides Satoshi to run a full node.

In the following days, the entire bitcoin network consisted of just the two of them. Finney later recalled: "I exchanged a few emails with Satoshi, mainly me reporting bugs and him fixing them."

On January 12, Satoshi sent Finney 10 bitcoins, marking the first transaction in bitcoin history.

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Unfortunately, just a few months after helping bitcoin get started, Finney was diagnosed with ALS. As his illness progressed, his activity gradually decreased. Meanwhile, Satoshi also gradually faded away after 2010, finally disappearing completely in 2011.

Two trajectories, two people, intersected at the critical moment of bitcoin's birth, then each went their separate ways. One disappeared into the depths of the internet, the other's body was ultimately cryonically preserved in liquid nitrogen. The true relationship between them may forever remain a mystery.

The Shining Moment of Crypto Stars

From RPOW to bitcoin's POW, the technical lineage is clear. Speculating whether Finney was Satoshi Nakamoto is of little significance—it's more of a topic for idle conversation.

But perhaps more worthy of remembrance is that over a decade ago, Satoshi and Finney, two early forum users, communicated and supported each other, repeatedly testing a little-noticed cypherpunk experiment until it went live.

No witnesses, no applause, just two computers quietly running in some corner of the internet.

They never anticipated that this "peer-to-peer electronic cash system," which seemed a bit geeky, would open the era of crypto more than a decade later, creating a trillion-dollar market; nor did they expect central banks around the world to study it seriously, Wall Street to embrace it, or its name to be part of financial transformation.

More importantly, the bitcoin jointly created by these cryptography pioneers continues to correct, change, and influence more people's perspectives and investment choices.

Finney once said something during a discussion on digital cash that remains moving even today:

"Computer technology can be used to liberate and protect people, not to control them."

Searching for Satoshi Nakamoto: The Body of Bitcoin's First Recipient Has Been Cryogenically Frozen for 11 Years image 7

This was written in 1992, 17 years before bitcoin. But it accurately predicted the dilemmas we face today and the answers bitcoin tries to provide.

And Satoshi Nakamoto, whose identity remains a mystery to this day, was even more carefree, leaving behind a famous quote that is remembered and admired by later generations:

"If you don't believe me or don't get it, I don't have time to try to convince you, sorry."

This sentence later became a spiritual totem for the crypto community. It represents an attitude: truth does not need to be sold; time will prove everything.

On August 28, 2014, Hal Finney passed away. His last programming project was a software to enhance bitcoin wallet security. Even when completely paralyzed and only able to operate a computer via eye-tracking, he was still contributing code to the system he helped bring to life.

Searching for Satoshi Nakamoto: The Body of Bitcoin's First Recipient Has Been Cryogenically Frozen for 11 Years image 8

Satoshi Nakamoto has not appeared since 2011. His 1 million bitcoins remain untouched to this day, like a digital monument reminding people of the system's origins. Some say this is the ultimate "proof of burn"; the founder proved he did not create bitcoin for personal gain by never using his own wealth.

If one day in the future, medicine really can revive Finney, what would he think of today's crypto world? Would he be proud of bitcoin's success, or disappointed by some of its directions?

There are no answers.

But whether or not Hal Finney was Satoshi Nakamoto, he is an indispensable figure in bitcoin history. Without his participation, support, and contributions, bitcoin might never have become reality.

The moment of shining stars has passed, but the light they left behind still illuminates the road ahead.


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Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.

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