Jim Blasko, a crypto enthusiast, has claimed to have unearthed “the official oldest known uploaded copy of Satoshi's Bitcoin” code, originally uploaded in August 2009.
In an Oct. 7 post on Facebook, Blasko said he found code dating back prior to the earliest days Satoshi went public with Bitcoin $19,584 Bitcoin -2.07% MARKET CAP $375.48b VOL. 24H $1.16b BTC $58.98k
“This particular upload was thought to have been lost for at least 10 years, but after doing research on some old coins I made, I went to [SourceForge] and with a little browser hacking I found the lost Bitcoin v0.1 raw data and files,” said Blasko. “Since 2012 it was thought that the raw code and the files were gone as they had been scraped from the [SourceForge] search engine for some reason [...] I did some digging and I was able to find the original code.”
According to the two SourceForge links provided by Blasko, Satoshi’s personal notations included remarks on why Bitcoin used base-58 “instead of standard base-64 encoding” and questioned what to do about errors in the future:
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The first Bitcoin block — the Genesis Block — was mined on Jan. 3, 2009, following Satoshi releasing the cryptocurrency’s white paper in 2008. Satoshi's identity continues to be a source of speculation among many in the space, with the pseudonymous creator being remembered with statues, papers, memes, and nonfungible tokens.
Cointelegraph was unable to verify the authenticity of Blasko’s claims at the time of publication. This story may be updated.