Adam Back has rejected a new claim that he is Bitcoin creator Satoshi Nakamoto. In a Bloomberg Podcasts interview on April 10, 2026, he said the theory lacks new evidence. He also offered three technical reasons to challenge the claim.
The renewed debate followed a New York Times investigation by journalist John Carreyrou and AI expert Dylan Freedman. Their review compared old mailing list messages with Nakamoto’s known writings. The analysis pointed to Back as the closest match in three writing tests.

Back told Yahoo Finance that the theory does not hold up. He said, “I think the most probable situation is that Satoshi is somebody who’s not talking to documentary film crews, to investigative journalists, who is not participating in the forums or at conferences with his real name.”
Back said he would have approached Bitcoin’s privacy design in a different way. He said he would have used privacy technology from a paper by Sander and Ta-Shma. That, he argued, does not appear in Bitcoin’s early design.
He also pointed to errors in Bitcoin’s early code. Back said the code contains cryptographic formatting mistakes that he would not make. He presented that as a direct reason against the claim.
His third point came from old IRC records. Back said those logs show him asking other developers to explain parts of Bitcoin at the time. He argued that those questions do not fit someone who had created the system.
Carreyrou said his team spent 18 months examining material from three major internet mailing lists. The review covered decades of public messages and private correspondence. It also used emails released by early Bitcoin contributor Martti Malmi in a court case.
According to the report, Back and Nakamoto shared several writing habits. These included two spaces between sentences, British spelling, and similar hyphen use. Carreyrou said on the New York Times’ Daily podcast that he is “somewhere between 99.5% and 100%” certain he identified Bitcoin’s creator.
The report also noted a timing pattern in Back’s online activity. It said he was quiet on mailing lists while Nakamoto was active. It also said he reappeared around the time Nakamoto stopped posting.
Back said the writing analysis can be misleading. He said, “There’s an element of confirmation bias in it.” He added that people in the same field often sound alike because they share similar interests and technical language.
He said programmers focused on privacy and cryptography can show similar patterns in writing. In his view, that makes style matching less reliable on its own. He said the current debate still does not present new proof.
The discussion has also renewed attention on Back’s place in digital cash history. Nakamoto contacted him before releasing the Bitcoin white paper. Even so, Back continues to deny that he wrote it or created Bitcoin.
The post Adam Back Pushes Back On Satoshi Theory With Three Technical Arguments appeared first on CoinCentral.


