Bitcoin Developers Push Back Against Craig Wright's Claim to Billions of Dollars in Bitcoin (coindesk.com) 82
Long-time Slashdot reader UnknowingFool writes: In 2021, Craig Wright sued 12 bitcoin developers who refused help him recover 111,000 bitcoins he claimed were lost in a hack. His company, Tulip Trading, wanted the developers to put in a backdoor mechanism in bitcoin that would override the ownership of the coins, arguing it was the developers "fiduciary duty" to assist him. The developers allege (PDF) that Tulip and Wright never owned the coins and the evidence of ownership provided is "fabricated." Tulip Trading "never owned the digital assets and has commenced this claim fraudulently and in reliance on fabricated documents," the developers' lawyers said in a statement. "Dr. Wright has a long history of fraud, forgery, and dishonesty ... [and is using] the English courts as an instrument of fraud."
Money (Score:2)
Interesting as instructing Barristers etc. at the High Court costs very large sums of money indeed and they don't work on a "no win, no fee" basis unless a litigation fund bankrolls it.
Someone has very deep pockets.
Re:Money (Score:4, Insightful)
Craig Wright has convinced people to lend him money against Bitcoin that he fraudulently claims he owns
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My god... borrowing against fictional assets? That should surely limit his prospects. He can only hope to ever become... president... :D
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... and pedantry spoils another joke!
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That's... a sublime bit of work there. Golf clap.
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wait a sec ... (Score:2)
wanted the developers to put in a backdoor mechanism in bitcoin that would override the ownership of the coins, arguing it was the developers "fiduciary duty" to assist him.
is that even possible?
under the laws for commoditys? (Score:2)
under the laws for commoditys?
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wanted the developers to put in a backdoor mechanism in bitcoin that would override the ownership of the coins, arguing it was the developers "fiduciary duty" to assist him.
is that even possible?
If you're asking if it's technically possible, yes, it is. Just like Thompson's compiler, you have to trust the system because when it becomes untrusted you don't own what you think you own. https://www.cs.cmu.edu/~rdrile... [cmu.edu]
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For it to be possible, more than half the network would have to agree, which they won't.
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More than half the mining power. But if technically implemented this would cause a hard fork creating a new craig-is-god fork which with probably zero valued coins.
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It would need every miner to accept the transaction, which would be unique on the ledger, otherwise a fork would occur.
So, in theory yes, in practicality, getting all those miners to agree, across dozens of countries and legal jurisdictions Fuck no.
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Why wouldn't it be?
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Craig Wright's house (Score:3, Interesting)
Craig Wright should claims he owns his house because of some "deed of trust" or "note" or something.
I want the legal system to change what that deed means so when it says "Owned by Craig Wright" just rewrite it to "NOT owned by Craig Wright."
It's not fraud if the whole system says "this is not the way it was, and that's just the way it's going to be."
That's the problem with fraudsters, conmen, and election-deniers. They just keep going and going and going. A "setback" just means try it again two years later but use different hand gestures. https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
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Nah, NOT enough random WORDS capitalized.
Also Trump doesn't know what a quisling is.
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I'm pretty sure Republicans would be fine with not allowing mail-in votes for anyone including Republicans, beyond service members or people out of the country for some planned reason as it long has been.
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I'm pretty sure Republicans would be fine with not allowing mail-in votes for anyone including Republicans...
OK, if you're pretty sure then it'd be easy to google up some examples right? Easy there tiger.
Actual word on the street is that Republican groups are preparing to launch their own ballot harvesting operations in states where it is legal, because they recognize that they were beat fair and square when it came to this particular tactic in the last election. But you'd only know that if you consumed any news outside your little bubble. So, with this in mind the issue of mail-in voting is diminished somewhat
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That's the problem with fraudsters, conmen, and election-deniers. They just keep going and going and going. A "setback" just means try it again two years later but use different hand gestures.
You are so right [politico.com].
Tulip Trading (Score:4, Insightful)
Maybe this is all simply a way of discrediting the entire industry?
In other news (Score:4, Insightful)
Seriously is this guy just a lunatic or can those 12 programmers really do what he's asking them to?
Re: In other news (Score:2)
It's already been done at least once.
Somebody took advantage of a glitch in the system at a crypto company, and took a bunch of Bitcoin out, they were not entitled to. The developers, took their money back, since they own in the code, they were able to do it...
Re: In other news (Score:5, Interesting)
This is nothing like that. At all. That was a glitch in the system that the entire network agreed upon to run a fix for. It benefited the health of the network and its users to fix it.
Absolutely no one would run a node with code to give Craig Wright any Bitcoins he claims are his. It benefits no one but that conman and compromises the inegrity of the Bitcoin network. And there is alternative software to run a node other than Bitcoin Core.
The network majority has to agree to any changes made. It is a feature of the system. That seems to be a big page most people commenting are missing here (or ignoring)
So why is he suing these programmers? (Score:2)
To be fair I don't understand the n
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Any programmer could submit a pull-request to implement the proposed changes.
Almost guaranteed it would be rejected by the other developers. However, even if somehow they all agreed to accept it and that code got into an "official" release of bitcoin-core, the entire community would need to upgrade to it, creating a hard-fork in the process.
This would be so hugely controversial that it is inconceivable a majority of the network would upgrade.
Craig Wright knows this. It is unclear what his true motivati
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Craig Wright knows this. It is unclear what his true motivations are. He's a weird guy.
His motivation is to fool courts to award him coins therefore money that were never his. Remember that Wright owes $100M in the Kleiman case based on his stipulations to that court that he owned millions of coins. Many people like me doubt he actually owns that many coins. At today's Bitcoin price, he needs to sell about 3770 coin to pay off that case. Otherwise he would have to default or admit to the court he lied about owning those other coins.
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Craig Wright knows this. It is unclear what his true motivations are. He's a weird guy.
He might not actually know it.
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This is false. No bitcoin transaction has ever been "reversed" or "charged back". Ever. You need to include citations if you are going to make such an absurd claim.
The most well known crypto to have done something like this is ethereum, most notably after the first DOA release [arstechnica.com], but there have been other events as well.
/. will never stop being salty about crypto
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I'm pretty sure that never happened. I think you are thinking of the ETH DAO reversal.
Re:In other news (Score:5, Informative)
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He already has his own project where this ownership model is implemented. No exchanges carry the coin and the only ones trading it are his financial backers who are just manipulating the price to keep it at about 0.1% of bitcoin. The miners and nodes are essentially all owned by a single entity, as well.
The backers who are funding his scam lawsuits would be the only ones to pay for his faketoshi coins. They really should just end the lawsuits and pay him directly because they have already lost quite a lot
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Who determines the value of the coins on a chain? The businesses that exchange them for dollars, goods, services, or the hobbyists at home?
Could the 3 majority miners be compelled to implement the "redirection"? What would happen to the chain if there were no large miners?
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Why would anyone outside the UK participate in this fraud? There aren't any major miners in the UK, AFAIK, and miners don't validate the rules of the chain. That's up to the nodes as proven in 2017 with the block size wars.
A major miner indicated a few years ago it was going to report on OFAC-compliant blocks. The idea was quickly scuttled as a result of the backlash, so that's not likely to happen in the future.
If any miner, big or small, mined one of the blocks for the new chain that was not compliant w
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Yes. They produce a block based on the latest validated state of the chain and send it to the network for validation and commitment to the chain. They can and do use their own algorithm to do it because that is a potential competitive advantage, but If the block fails the validation in the nodes, they will reject it and it won't propagate to other nodes. So, the miners have to produce blocks that conform to the consensus rules running on the existing network of nodes or they won't get the block reward (subs
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A court order? Well, for starters, what court in what jurisdiction? Because anyone outside that jurisdiction can tell that court to go pound sand.
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Bitcoin IS decentralized. All blocks in the blockchain (and transactions in a block) have to be verified by miners. There are rules for the blocks (for example, the block cannot be above a certain size, hash has to be SHA256 and follow the requirements based on difficulty etc).
You can modify the software to accept different blocks or transactions. However, those blocks would be incompatible with the old version of the software, so the miners who run the old version will not include those blocks/transactions
Dr? (Score:2)
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Hes the digital equivalent of a Sovereign Citizen
What he believes, goes. What the law says, or other people believe, is false.
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He's got to have a nuke strapped to his motorcyle for that to be true.
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Do the Sovereign Citizens use the corrupt system to try to get rich on fraud?
Crypto was invented to avoid people like him (Score:2)
Not a fiat currency? (Score:3)
So the claimed "inventor" of a decentralized currency want to get rich by a fiat transfer of value to him?
If this goes though, I wonder how many people will abandon Bitcoin, since they will have proved that it does not live up to its claims of decentralization, security and anonymity.
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but there would still be a chain where the coins were not reassigned.
But if the court decides in favor of this man, then such a chain could be declared illegal, and exchanges trading with it could face legal troubles, further litigation etc.
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I really see no reason why anyone outside of the UK would care. Even within the UK, no one who understands bitcoin and its ethos will participate in validating the faketoshi scam.
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The case is bigger than bitcoin (Score:2)
If Wright gets his way, all open source development would be at risk of fiduciary liability.
Banking systems running on linux? The SCO v. IBM case pales in comparison for the legal ramifications this one might cause.
111,000 bitcoins lost? (Score:2)
If I understand correctly, that means there's an address that owns 111,000 bitcoins, and that no one else is claiming ownership of it, or simply transferring the coins to a different address. I could understand a few blocks being mined and not claimed, but 111,000?
Assuming they don't belong to the alleged fraudster, does that mean those coins have been lost entirely?
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Correct, they are lost, presumably, forever.
Since you are interested, last I checked, the total number of "lost" (unrecoverable private keys) coins is around 1 million.
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It's just coins that haven't moved in a while.
The oldest ones (pay to public key) might be vulnerable to quantum factoring in the practical future.
Newer pay to script hash keys are fine.
Even if an ancient society owns some coin they should move them at some point.
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There are only three ways:
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A long history of fraud, forgery, and dishonesty (Score:2)
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Do it yourself (Score:2)
You have after all repeatedly claimed to have invented bitcoin. Why do you need developers?
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Byword of shamelessness (Score:2)
Details of the fabrications (Score:2)
Wright's claims:
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The "PO" metadata creation and modification date and time are in the UTC+10 time zone. If the PO had been created in February 2011, the correct date and time would be UTC+11 time zone.
Was Craig located in Brisbane (where he comes from, according to Wikipedia) or Sydney at this time? Because if he was in Brisbane then it would indeed be UTC+10 because Queensland does not have DST.
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So let me get this straight... (Score:2)
So this guy is smart enough to invent Bitcoin, but not smart enough to avoid losing billions of dollars? Hmmm.