Satoshi Nakamoto is like a pioneer of cryptography, leaving behind 21 million digital gold coins deep within the internet, then disappearing in the same way. No photos, no voice, only a name and an eternal piece of code surviving in the world.
This name has long transcended a specific individual. It has become a symbol—questioning traditional financial order, yearning for a technological utopia, an ultimate sense of mystery that "the divine dragon appears but never shows its tail." It is precisely because of this ambiguity that Bitcoin has gained the purest independence.
And today? U.S. non-farm payroll data is below expectations, CPI is about to be announced, and the market is volatile. More and more investors are beginning to think—how should we allocate digital assets in such a macro environment? Many strategic participants are increasing their Bitcoin holdings, seemingly answering a question with their actions: Did Satoshi's original vision truly oppose time itself?
Do you also want to experience that revelation from the "God of anonymity"?
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MoneyBurnerSociety
· 01-13 17:45
Sixteen years and still losing money, Satoshi Nakamoto is really ruthless
Really, every time I increase my holdings, it's at the peak. This is not a coincidence, it's my superpower
CPI is here, and so is my liquidation price. Perfect synchronization
Ask me how I feel? I feel my wallet screaming
God of anonymity? I am just the anonymity pauper
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PaperHandsCriminal
· 01-13 17:43
Sixteen years later, I'm still losing. Satoshi Nakamoto is really ruthless, making us all his followers haha
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ZKSherlock
· 01-13 17:41
actually... the whole "satoshi as a symbol" framing kinda misses the point though? like, pseudonymity ≠ mystique. it's just a basic privacy-preserving design choice, nothing more romantic than that. but sure, let's pretend bitcoin achieved "pure independence" when it's literally subject to macro conditions like anyone else rn lol
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WalletsWatcher
· 01-13 17:36
Sixteen years later, Satoshi still remains a myth. Where is the promised decentralization? It's still a game for institutions and big players.
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PrivacyMaximalist
· 01-13 17:27
Satoshi Nakamoto really is like a legend in the crypto world. It's been sixteen years and no one has uncovered him; his methods are absolutely brilliant. The more mysterious Bitcoin is, the more valuable it becomes, honestly.
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Another non-farm payroll report and CPI data—it's better to just go all-in on BTC. I'm tired of these macroeconomic indicators.
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God of anonymity? Wake up, that's just a persona. Actions speak louder than words, and code is the real truth.
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Disappearing without a trace for sixteen years—that's the most perfect exit, unlike some project teams that come out every day to cut the leeks.
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This writing is a bit outrageous... but indeed, because Satoshi Nakamoto hasn't shown up, Bitcoin hasn't been trapped by any individual's words.
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What kind of enlightenment do you feel? Isn't it just to make us HODL? Hehe.
Sixteen years.
Satoshi Nakamoto is like a pioneer of cryptography, leaving behind 21 million digital gold coins deep within the internet, then disappearing in the same way. No photos, no voice, only a name and an eternal piece of code surviving in the world.
This name has long transcended a specific individual. It has become a symbol—questioning traditional financial order, yearning for a technological utopia, an ultimate sense of mystery that "the divine dragon appears but never shows its tail." It is precisely because of this ambiguity that Bitcoin has gained the purest independence.
And today? U.S. non-farm payroll data is below expectations, CPI is about to be announced, and the market is volatile. More and more investors are beginning to think—how should we allocate digital assets in such a macro environment? Many strategic participants are increasing their Bitcoin holdings, seemingly answering a question with their actions: Did Satoshi's original vision truly oppose time itself?
Do you also want to experience that revelation from the "God of anonymity"?