Long before most of the world had heard of Craig Wright, this Australian computer scientist discreetly filed his first patent related to the newly created Bitcoin, which was then valued at ten dollars.
The following year, a relatively unknown exchange called Coinbase raised five million dollars "to facilitate the use of Bitcoin for the average consumer." One year later, in 2014, Bitcoin Magazine co-founder Vitalik Buterin published an article describing a new type of blockchain called Ethereum, giving credit to the pseudonymous creator of Bitcoin, Satoshi Nakamoto, for their advancements in cryptography.
This would impact everything, from the trillion-dollar cryptocurrency market to corporate implementations built by some of the world's largest companies. And perhaps even more unsettling, Wright is employing legal tactics that could set precedents for software published under the permissive copyright rules known as open-source, including the widely-used open-source JavaScript framework Meta's React, Microsoft's Visual Studio for code editing, and Linus Torvalds' Linux operating system, which powers approximately 40% of the internet.
Craig Steven Wright was born in 1970 in Brisbane, Australia, to a mother who inputted data on punch cards for early computers and a Vietnam veteran father. To most, Wright is a polymath, with over twenty degrees listed on his website, ranging from a master's in Statistics and Forensic Psychology to a diploma in Art Appreciation. Over the years, the intellectual property he has worked on, which includes a wide range of ways to utilize blockchain technology, has shifted in what amounts to a game of trusts and companies.
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Craig Wright, Satoshi Nakamoto, Bitcoin, cryptocurrency, blockchain, Ethereum, Coinbase, open-source, React, Visual Studio, Linux, intellectual property, computer science, cryptography
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