HBO documentary proves disappointing: inconsistent evidence and rather peculiar conclusions brought by director Hoback.
The HBO documentary, “Money Electric: The Bitcoin Mystery” suggests that Peter Todd, a well-known Bitcoin developer since 2010, could be Satoshi Nakamoto.
Director Cullen Hoback‘s hypothesis is based on few temporal coincidences, Todd’s interactions on BitcoinTalk forum, and circumstantial evidence that would have connections to Nakamoto. In particular, the main evidence would be a response from Todd to Satoshi Nakamoto on BitcoinTalk. Hoback believes this post was accidentally published using Todd’s profile, a rather weak proof.
However, Todd immediately rejected these claims through a post on X, considering them baseless:
“I’m not Satoshi,” he commented.
During the documentary, Todd also stated:
“This is going to be very funny when you put this into the documentary and a bunch of Bitcoiners watch it.”
Addressing the director, Todd stated:
“I will admit you’re pretty creative. You come up with some crazy theories. It’s ludicrous. But I’ll say, yeah, of course I’m Satoshi. And I’m Craig Wright.”
The film also explores other aspects of Todd’s career, including his contribution to projects like OpenTimestamps and his work on privacy-focused cryptocurrencies like Zcash.
Criticism of the production
Hoback’s documentary has received several criticisms from the Bitcoin community, with many users judging the evidence presented in the film as purely speculative and abstract.
Regarding Todd’s response to Nakamoto, BitMEX Research stated on X:
“This is clearly ridiculous! It is just an example of @peterktodd replying to Satoshi with a snarky, pedantic and accurate comment. Yes, an output value will need to be reduced to generate a txn fee. This is the kind of comment Peter could make today. There is zero reason to believe this was Satoshi.”
User Pledditor commented:
“That was one of the least compelling Satoshi Nakamoto identities I’ve ever seen. Early on in the documentary, (around 11 minutes in), the narrator suggests the identity of Satoshi should not be known because it could endanger his safety. Then ironically, he proceeds to recklessly accuse Peter Todd of being Satoshi Nakamoto without actually having proof.”