The bitcoin market sold off more than 7% Wednesday, according to Bitstamp market data, after a Twitter bot alleged a recent bitcoin transaction came from a wallet possibly belonging to Satoshi Nakamoto, the protocolâs creator.Â
But almost nothing supports the rumor the coins indeed belong to Nakamoto.
âWhale Alert,â a popular Twitter bot account that tracks on-chain transactions for multiple blockchains, tweeted that 40 BTC were transferred from a âpossible Satoshi owned wallet.â The price dipped as the tweet quickly went viral.Â
Commenting on the marketâs reaction, Hunter Merghart, head of U.S. operations at Bitstamp, said sellers on the exchange âgot good fast liquidity and buyers were there to fill it. Everything worked as designed.âÂ
See also: Price Drops 7% in an Hour After Bitcoin Sees a Ghost
That the coins were old (mined in 2009) and inactive (not moved until Wednesday) is the only link possibly connecting them to Nakamoto.Â
Commenting on the unconfirmed alert, bitcoin software engineer Jameson Lopp noted the script behind the account is a bit naive and should be improved for accuracy. âYâall need to up your analysis game,â he tweeted.
More sophisticated analysis casts doubt on Nakamotoâs connection to these coins. Analysis of the habits of a single, early miner has been used to develop the âPatoshi pattern,â which is believed to indicate which blocks Nakamoto most likely mined and those he didnât.Â
The âPatoshiâ miner is believed to be Nakamoto, according to the hashrate analysis. Disproving that bitcoinâs creator owned these coins, however, is ultimately impossible.