This Wired article + HN comments are interesting, however is most likely completely fake. The linked HN section is much more based in fact. Both, however, seem worth reading.
> “The fool used a primary gmx under his full name...”
Really didn't want to read past that quote. In one corner you have Jeffrey; he can get into your email and sell your livelihood to the highest bidder. In the other corner you have Satoshi; he delivered to you, for free and without praise, a crucial bit of tech that allows you to regain some control in an increasingly authoritarian world. Ya... what a fool.
It's not exactly free, Satoshi imposed an inflation tax on the currency by mining many early coins. I don't think that's necessarily wrong for Satoshi to have done though.
Sad story if this is true. Regardless, I'm not shocked that the gmx was hacked..
I'm shocked nobody at cardreaderfactory.com hasn't leaked the invoice or any of the other third party companies he's likely had direct business with -- If he's just shipping stock to his home. ETA til their customer DB is dumped?
Since this info has posted both here and on Reddit: the name/address is easily recoverable. Address doesn't show up on Google, name doesn't match anybody obvious. Payment type for the FGPA that was ordered was 'cash'. I'd bet this was just a fake order somebody placed, and the company never did an e-mail validation.
So we're looking at the gmx.com account being legitimately hacked -- but Satoshi had good enough opsec to not leak anything interesting from the account.
The hacker gained access to the gmx.com mailbox - resets all of the third party accounts and still comes out with nothing of value?!!
1) So he has to fake an invoice to gain media buzz? I don't buy it.
1) I don't think he faked it. I bet he thought it was real, but someone just used Satoshi's email when entering a fake order in 2013, the same way I occasionally use "bob@example.com" when creating a useless account.
2) Apparently real e-mails. He has re-forwarded some from 2011 to the original recipients, who have confirmed.
So possibly there's more of value in that account, but doubtful Satoshi's name/address. The hacker just saw the fake order and thought he got lucky.
I thought ransom was supposed to work by making the person whom you have secret information pay you NOT to disclose the info. Especially if this "Jeffrey" knows the the Satoshi's true identity like the hacker says. That's not even mentioning that Satoshi almost certainly has way more than $20k in bitcoin (likely 100's of millions of dollars) and has a real interest in preserving anonymity. Wouldn't that make him personally the obvious target to extort?
Or maybe this "Jeffrey" is full of bs and has no real information, which would explain why he's trying to get money from the public. Obvious troll seems obvious.
Exactly. And, if he felt like being taken seriously, he could prove a dox only to SN (release a hash of his hometown or first name or something). He's got nothing (or is incredibly dumb).
The logic is that he (might) have access to millions and millions of dollars worth of Bitcoin. But of course, it would be next to impossible to convert any of that to USD as soon as people found out what had happened. If they currency didn't crumble, nobody was accept coins that could be traced back to the wallets.
He's probably (physically) safe, although look at how the faux SN was mobbed. Imagine if he were real. He'd be harassed, and anything he did or said would affect Bitcoin and undermine his intents for it.