
The big picture: The film Finding Satoshi aims to solve what its creators call one of the biggest financial mysteries ever.
- Director Tucker Tooley said the project blends investigative reporting with storytelling about “a human being” behind Bitcoin.
- The team deliberately avoided conspiracy tropes, instead focusing on Satoshi’s motivations, struggles, and context.
- The mystery itself, why someone created Bitcoin and vanished, drives the narrative.
How they investigated: The team shifted tactics after early resistance from crypto insiders.
- Investigative journalist Bill Cohan said major crypto figures often dismissed the question as irrelevant or a “waste of time.”
- That resistance pushed the team to bring in private investigator Tyler Maroney and dig deeper.
- They narrowed suspects to a small group of cryptographers with specific technical skills and early involvement in Bitcoin’s origins.
Behind the scenes: The reporting relied on years of relationship-building and technical analysis.
- Maroney said the team focused on cryptographers, mathematicians, and early “cypherpunks,” not investors or executives.
- Sources included pioneers like Whitfield Diffie, who helped invent public-key cryptography and industry veterans such as Joseph Lubin and Katie Haun.
Why it matters: The film reframes Bitcoin’s origin story and challenges how people think about it today.
- Maroney said Bitcoin began as a privacy tool, not a store of wealth, rooted in fears of “surveillance capitalism.”
- The creators argue understanding that context is key to understanding Bitcoin’s purpose.
- The mystery also raises stakes: Satoshi is believed to hold about 1.1 million Bitcoin that have never moved.
What’s driving the mystery: Not everyone wants the answer.
- Cohan said some major investors may prefer the myth to remain intact, fearing reputational risk if Satoshi were controversial.
- Others argue it simply doesn’t matter, comparing it to not knowing who invented the internet.
- The filmmakers reject that view, saying the identity and intent behind Bitcoin are central to its story.
What comes next: The film promises a definitive conclusion and a broader takeaway.
- The team says it reached a clear answer, though they won’t reveal it outside the documentary.
- They emphasize the journey: understanding the people and ideas that led to Bitcoin’s creation.
- Tooley said the goal is to make a complex, technical subject accessible and entertaining for a broad audience.
- The documentary comes out April 22, 2026 at findingsatoshi.com
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