Russian hackers reveal the identity of Bitcoin Satoti Nakamoto (Photo) founder

Self-appointed as “Detectives” from Russian internet blackouts say they have discovered the true identity of Bitcoin Satoshi Nakamotos' founder, posting on the internet a screenshot of the mysterious image's face. Bitcoin, the digital currency that has been on a very long journey with explosive increases followed by spectacular collapse during the weeks [...]
Bitcoin, the digital currency that has been on a very long journey of explosive growth followed by spectacular collapse in recent weeks, has shaken the financial world, leaving analysts worried that Bitcoin mania is just a huge speculating bubble.
It has been eight years since the introduction of this decentralised cryptova peace, and perhaps the greatest mystery is still the true identity of Satoosti Nakamoto.
communal, ndv. If you don't mind what you're talking about, why don't you do this? Pic.twitter. com/WB3w c d LJWC
) Tatiana (@Litania340) December 21, 2017
Bitcoin's “The founder, Satoshi Nakamoto, becoming the richest man on the planet, finally appeared in public”. Image immediately led to an altitude of users born after 2000 who rushed to understand the human identity in the photo, reports “Sputnik International” Transmission Periscope. But older users immediately remembered him as Sergei Mavrodi, the infamous and founder of the MMM, a pyramid scheme that wiped out the savings of millions of Russians in the mid-1990s.
Mavrod, a mathematician and programmer, established his MMM pyramid, promising annual fantastic profits of up to 3,000%, leading up from 10 million Russians, struggling to survive economic chaos after the collapse of the Soviet Union to place their last savings in the scheme.
MMM came full of an aggressive advertising campaign, displaying the Russian strategic character of Lyon Golubkov.
MMM declared bankruptcy in 1997 and Mavrodi developed other pyramid schemes, including an online scheme called “Stock Generation”, until his arrest in 2003.
In 2007, he was sentenced to four and a half years. Released in 2011, he began several new classical pyramid schemes in Russia, India, and China and has tried to expand to Europe.
On the eve of the spectacular growth of Bitcoin and the fall this month, several blog writers and forum users actually compared Bitcoi to Mavrodi's scheme, or suggested that Bitcoi's rapid growth earlier this month was driven by Mavrodi's efforts./Periscopi/












