A new documentary called Finding Satoshi launched April 22, 2026, and its creators say they have done what no one else has managed: identify the person who created Bitcoin and disappeared.
Director Tucker Tooley said the film treats the search as a story about a real human being, not a conspiracy theory. The goal was to make a complex technical subject accessible to a wide audience.

Investigative journalist Bill Cohan and private investigator Tyler Maroney joined the project after early efforts hit a wall. Many prominent crypto figures dismissed the search as irrelevant or a waste of time.
That resistance pushed the team to change approach. Instead of chasing investors or executives, they focused on cryptographers, mathematicians, and early cypherpunks with the technical skills to have built Bitcoin.
The team spent years building trust with sources inside the cypherpunk community. They analyzed blockchain data and leaned on relationships with figures who had been close to Bitcoin’s earliest days.
Sources included Whitfield Diffie, a pioneer of public-key cryptography, as well as industry veterans Joseph Lubin and Katie Haun.
Maroney said the investigators narrowed the list of suspects to a small group of people with very specific technical knowledge and early ties to Bitcoin’s creation.
One name that has long circulated is Adam Back, CEO of Blockstream. Many in the crypto world believe he could be Nakamoto. Back has consistently and publicly denied this.
The filmmakers say Bitcoin was not originally built as a store of wealth. Maroney said it began as a privacy tool, created in response to concerns about surveillance capitalism.
Understanding that original purpose, they argue, is key to understanding what Bitcoin actually is.
The stakes of the mystery are not just historical. Satoshi is believed to hold around 1.1 million Bitcoin that have never moved. At current prices, that is an enormous sum.
Cohan noted that some major investors may prefer the mystery to stay unsolved. If Satoshi turned out to be a controversial figure, it could create reputational risk for Bitcoin.
Others in the industry say the identity simply does not matter, comparing it to not knowing who invented the internet.
The filmmakers disagree. They say the identity and original intent behind Bitcoin are central to the whole story.
The documentary says it reaches a definitive conclusion, though the team has not revealed the answer outside the film itself.
Finding Satoshi is available at findingsatoshi.com as of April 22, 2026
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