Craig Wright Wants His $2.5 Billion, Demanding For a Bitcoin Hard Fork
04 Februar 2023 - 08:22PM
NEWSBTC
Judge Colin Birss of the London Court of Appeal on Friday, February
3, ruled that Craig Wright’s lawsuit against 14 Bitcoin
developers has what it takes to go to trial. Craig Wright: Free My
Bitcoin Craig Wright, through Tulip Trading, claims to be Satoshi
Nakamoto, the founder of Bitcoin. He is suing 14 developers,
seeking to recover 111,000 BTC. The haul is estimated to be
worth around $2.5 billion at spot rates. However, the figure could
be higher if BTC continues rallying. In a lawsuit, Craig said he
lost the private keys of his wallet after his home computer was
hacked. Therefore, he can’t recover coins. Even so, through his
company, Tulip Trading, Craig asserts that developers should
intervene by introducing code changes for him to gain access.
Related Reading: Don’t Get Too Greedy On Bitcoin, Analyst Suggests,
Here’s Why Unlike ordinary cash transfers, Bitcoin transactions are
irreversible once confirmed by special computers called “miners.”
Miners are tasked with confirming transactions. Because there
is no third party in the system and all transactions are
auto-verified, the sender must sign each transfer, ensuring that
they own the wallet. Behind each signature in a wallet is a
private key that verifies ownership. Like in Craig’s case, it is
virtually impossible to recover assets without a private key.
Regardless of the amount, coins that a private key cannot prove are
considered lost. As it stands, Craig Wright’s 111,000 BTC is
technically “lost,” levitating in the Bitcoin digital ether.
Opening A Pandora’s Box This state of affairs would only change if
developers “roll back” the Bitcoin network. For this to happen,
miners and interested parties must find a consensus. Considering
Bitcoin’s decentralized nature, any attempt or request for
“rollback” would likely be rejected immediately. In 2019, Binance
was hacked for 7,000 BTC. Its CEO, Changpeng Zhao, touted
the idea of a Bitcoin rollback to recover coins. It was rejected.
Related Reading: Will Bitcoin Price Return To $20,000? Here’s What
Investors Expect Although the case was thrown out last year, the
Court of Appeal ruling favors the plaintiff. Precisely, it
states that code writers now owe duties to coin owners, who are, in
this case, BTC holders, including Craig Wright and Tulip Trading.
This puts pressure on developers of a public network and might
discourage participation in the future. Most open-source code
writers behind platforms like Bitcoin, Ethereum, and others were
contributors, adding code to make the protocol better, stronger,
and faster. Whether or not this duty holds and open source
network developers are responsible to token holders will be
determined at full trial. Feature image from Canva, Chart from
TradingView
TRON (COIN:TRXUSD)
Historical Stock Chart
Von Feb 2023 bis Mär 2023
TRON (COIN:TRXUSD)
Historical Stock Chart
Von Mär 2022 bis Mär 2023