Fifteen years ago today, Satoshi Nakamoto left his last post on the Bitcoin forum and then disappeared forever.
His final discussion was about the potential "honeycomb" that could be triggered if WikiLeaks accepted Bitcoin donations. The next day, after an ordinary version update, he went completely offline. This was no coincidence; he was well aware that his presence could become the greatest centralized risk and attack target for this decentralized system. His disappearance became the final and most important contribution to the project—a supreme act of decentralization. From then on, Bitcoin no longer relied on any "father," surviving solely through mathematics and consensus. This fifteen-year silence is the most powerful and successful "signal" in the crypto world. $BTC $ETH
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Fifteen years ago today, Satoshi Nakamoto left his last post on the Bitcoin forum and then disappeared forever.
His final discussion was about the potential "honeycomb" that could be triggered if WikiLeaks accepted Bitcoin donations. The next day, after an ordinary version update, he went completely offline. This was no coincidence; he was well aware that his presence could become the greatest centralized risk and attack target for this decentralized system.
His disappearance became the final and most important contribution to the project—a supreme act of decentralization. From then on, Bitcoin no longer relied on any "father," surviving solely through mathematics and consensus. This fifteen-year silence is the most powerful and successful "signal" in the crypto world.
$BTC $ETH