Satoshi Nakamoto's personal ID first appeared in the 'cypherpunk' forum's mailing list, stating: Satoshi Nakamoto, born April 5, 1975, Japanese, male.

In 2008, Satoshi published the Bitcoin white paper, and soon after, it became popular, leading to the establishment of the Bitcoin community, especially with the support of the internet, more and more people got involved.
In December 2010, there was an organization called 'WikiLeaks', which is a nonprofit media organization that aims to expose insider dealings in money and power transactions, promoting social structure fairness and transparency; perhaps the intent was good, but this kind of operation is very complex.
Later, this organization accidentally leaked U.S. diplomatic cables, making it feel like their country had a group of openly transparent spies, and any government would find it hard to tolerate. Consequently, the U.S. government directly shut down all donation channels for the organization. This posed a challenge for some of the organization's senior leaders; fortunately, WikiLeaks founder Assange, being a punk expert, thought of a solution: simply use Bitcoin as a channel for accepting donations?
This was the largest payment transaction since the birth of Bitcoin, and the Bitcoin community cheered. However, Satoshi did not think it was a good thing for Bitcoin to be involved with the government too early, especially to confront the government directly at the start; that would be courting disaster!
Satoshi expressed his personal opinion on the Bitcoin forum: 'In any other circumstance, Bitcoin attracting people's attention is a good thing, but WikiLeaks has stirred up a hornet's nest, and the swarm is coming our way.'
On December 7, 2010, Satoshi Nakamoto sent an email to all major contributors, asking for them to be listed on the website.
At the same time, he also deleted his information from the website, clearly understanding that he was ultimately going to withdraw, but he did not mention this to anyone.
Between 2010 and 2011, a large number of top Bitcoin holders' wallets were created, and they were never withdrawn.
On February 22, 2011, Satoshi sent the last email to Martti, including a PGP signature to provide the administrator password, and maintained contact with him for a while, hoping to further achieve the decentralization of development power.
On April 26, 2011, Gavin Andresen received Satoshi's last email, which roughly conveyed the hope that his identity would not be mythologized any further, but rather that those involved in development management should speak more.
In March 2014, the media discovered a computer engineer named Dorian Satoshi Nakamoto, mistaking him for Satoshi Nakamoto, and subsequently, poor Dorian was scrutinized by the world and was overwhelmed.
Before long, Satoshi sent out his most formal email thereafter, stating: 'I am not Dorian.' It turned out to be a misunderstanding; this Nakamoto is not that Nakamoto.

Why is this referred to as the most formal email thereafter? Because the ones sent afterward were all sorts of chaotic threats, suspected to be a hacked account.
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