The decade-long mystery surrounding the identity of Bitcoin’s pseudonymous creator, Satoshi Nakamoto, has received a new perspective from one of the industry’s most influential figures.
Joseph Lubin, co-founder of Ethereum and CEO of ConsenSys, revealed in a recent interview that he believes the “leading candidates” for the role are the late cryptographers Len Sassaman and Hal Finney.
Lubin’s comments come as the crypto community grapples with the possibility that future quantum computers could crack the encryption protecting early Bitcoin wallets. Lubin dismissed recent mainstream media attempts to unmask Satoshi, including high-profile HBO documentaries and The New York Times reports.
“It’s definitely not Adam,” Lubin stated, referring to the Blockstream CEO often cited in theories. Instead, he reinforced a long-held thesis that the foundational work of Sassaman and Finney represents the strongest link to Bitcoin’s genesis.
Lubin also addressed the controversial issue of Satoshi’s untouched treasure, estimated at over 1 million BTC. To protect the network’s longevity against quantum breakthroughs, Lubin suggested that the solution is social consensus. He proposed setting a strict deadline for users to migrate assets to quantum-secure wallets. “If you don’t move your coins by that deadline, then you’re out of luck,” Lubin noted, arguing that such a move is necessary for Bitcoin to survive as “decentralized economic bandwidth.”
Since the Bitcoin white paper was published on October 31, 2008, the search for Satoshi has produced a gallery of suspects. The list of 14 primary candidates ranges from Dorian Nakamoto, the Japanese-American programmer famously outed and later cleared by Newsweek, to Nick Szabo, the creator of “bit gold,” and Wei Dai, whose “b-money” theory predated Bitcoin.
While Craig Wright is the only individual to publicly claim the title, others, such as Len Sassaman, are favorites for their tragic timing and academic brilliance. Sassaman, a privacy advocate and cryptographer, passed away shortly after Satoshi’s final message in 2011, which simply stated he had “moved on to other projects.”
As Bitcoin struggles to retain all-time highs, the identity of its creator remains the industry’s ultimate “cold case.” However, as Lubin’s remarks suggest, the protocol’s technical evolution may eventually force the network to confront the ghost of its founder.


















