- Craig Wright is required to display a legal notice on his website for six months following a court ruling stating he is not Satoshi Nakamoto.
- Early this year, a UK court ruled that Craig Wright lied “extensively and repeatedly” and forged documents to support his self-proclaimed assertion of being the inventor of Bitcoin.
A U.K. court ruling from early this year claimed that Australian computer scientist Craig Wright is not the Bitcoin creator he self-proclaimed to be. The court established that Wright had lied “extensively and repeatedly” and he forged documents to support his self-proclaimed assertion of being the inventor of Bitcoin.
Following the judge’s ruling, “Satoshi Nakamoto” has been obligated to modify his website with a legal notice displaying the court’s findings. According to the ruling, the notice must be displayed on his website for not less than 6 months.
The notice on his website states that Wright “extensively and repeatedly” lied in judicial proceedings that he was Satoshi Nakamoto. Additionally, the notice consists of an appendix detailing the forged documents that supported his narrative. Also constituting in the display is that he severely abused legal systems across the U.K., Norway, and the U.S. The notice also has links to the full judgment against Wright.
Reminiscing, the legal battle which kicked off in 2021, was headed by the Crypto Open Patent Alliance( COPA), a non-profit organization representing Bitcoin developers that aimed to prevent Wright from further proclaiming himself as Nakamoto. It’s also worth noting that this organization is backed by renowned crypto entities like Jack Dorsey of the Block and Coinbase, as well as organizations like Human Rights Watch.
According to COPA, with Wright claiming to be Satoshi, he could dictate the Bitcoin whitepaper and initiate legal actions against developers and critics.
Judge James Mellor, who overlooked the case judges unambiguously. Wright was found guilty of lying to the court, presenting forged evidence to support his false narrative. This being a severe case, Judge James referred Wright and his associate, Stefan Matthews, to the Crown Prosecution Service for potential perjury charges.
On top of including the notice on his website, Craig Wright is supposed to post the notice on all his social media pages and online platforms. With the notice on his website already underway, Craig has yet to post the notice on social media in compliance with the order.
The case has sent shockwaves through the crypto community. This case is a stepping stone towards transparency and truth in an industry mostly criticized for its lack of proper regulation. This ruling has also shed light on the Bitcoin community as they can move forward without Wright’s claims as the Bitcoin founder.
At the time of writing, Bitcoin is changing hands at $64,773.30 marking an 11.92% surge over the past week with a market cap of $1.276 trillion.