'Nour' and a New Friend: Satoshi Nakamoto's P2P Profile Makes New Post, Befriends User

gepubliceerd op by Cointele | gepubliceerd op

"The most loving, affectionate and caring person you'll ever meet. Extremely smart, funny and sensitive. A bit lost, still figuring out what she wants in life and how to reach it. Stubborn and not willing to take other peoples advice. When she smiles she makes you forget all the problems you have, her hug will give you an assurance that you have never felt and will never do."

Another possibility is that "Nour" is a transliteration of Arabic "نور" for "Light," also used to mean "Light" or "Fire" in ancient Hebrew and Aramaic: the latter is used in the "Haggadah," the text used to set the order of the ritual for the Jewish festival of Passover.

Alongside the cryptic four-letters, the account also befriended a user named Wagner Tamanaha, whose profile indicates he is based in São Paulo, Brazil.

Tamanaha has acknowledged the "Befriending," tweeting today in Portuguese, "Parece que o Satoshi reapareceu e estou sendo investigado :-).Publicly-shared posts on Tamanaha's Facebook page suggest he is currently active in the Brazilian blockchain and crypto community, and his blogspot profile contains a post titled"Social networks with crypto media Steemit, coming together in the blockchain revolution," dated November 2016.Nakamoto's abrupt disappearance in late 2010 spawned a legend almost as famous as the cryptocurrency he, she, or they invented on Oct. 31 2008 with the publication of the Bitcoin white paper.

The inventor's first "name," Satoshi, has also been used to christen one hundred millionth of one Bitcoin - the smallest, indivisible unit of the cryptocurrency.

Controversially self-proclaimed "Nakamoto" Craig Wright has recently been in the crypto limelight in connection with the fallout of the Bitcoin Cash hard fork in mid-November, which led to Wright's preferred protocol spinning off into the newly-forked Bitcoin SV token.

Bitcoin pioneer Jeff Garzik, reportedly the "third-biggest contributor" to Bitcoin's code and one of Nakamoto's key collaborators, has recently ventured his "personal theory" that the coder Floridian Dave Kleiman is the much-mythologized figure behind the coin.

x