Martti Malmi is a Finnish computer scientist and software developer who helped Satoshi develop Bitcoin during its first two years of operation.
Martti 'Sirius' Malmi is a Finnish computer scientist and software developer who helped Satoshi develop Bitcoin during its first two years of operation, and was known for making the first Bitcoin to fiat transaction.
Source: Martti Malmi (Twitter)
Early Life
When he wasn’t furiously copy and pasting, Malmi researched peer-to-peer currencies. When searching through the Google results for “p2p currency,” he stumbled upon the recently published Bitcoin whitepaper, which he recognised as “the only completely decentralized solution out there.”
Early Involvement in Bitcoin
Malmi’s first tasks included writing Bitcoin’s documentation and creating a FAQ section to help people understand Bitcoin. He also set up the first Bitcoin community forum, which later became BitcoinTalk, the most well-known crypto forum. The community would gather to discuss Bitcoin’s direction, code and any new developments. Satoshi also asked Malmi to help him grow Bitcoin’s user base and community. At the same time, Malmi started working for Whitevector, where he and his team “developed and maintained a social media monitoring and analyzing product.”
“Many thanks to Martti (Sirius-m) for all his development work.”
The Linux deployment was important for Bitcoin because it allowed a considerable number of developers to join who otherwise wouldn’t have.
Buying a Studio with BTC
In the early days, Bitcoin wasn’t nearly as competitive as it is now, which meant that anyone with a laptop could mine Bitcoin. By 2012, Malmi had managed to mine a whopping 55,000 BTC just using his laptop. He had sold most of this sum by 2012, when Bitcoin’s price hovered between $15-30, and bought a studio apartment in Helsinki.
“Big deal for a 22-year-old who never had much money. Probably the most expensive studio in the world now, but at least I got more than two pizzas.”
The studio apartment Malmi bought with his Bitcoin. Image by @marttimalmi.
It's lucky that Malmi saved any of this Bitcoin at all. In fact, it’s only because Satoshi personally asked him to run a node that he had any left over. He said:
“Perhaps owing to Finnish culture, idealistic mentality and lack of life experience, I never thought much about making money. It happened accidentally as a byproduct of Satoshi asking me to keep my node running so others could connect. Thank you, Satoshi.”
Satoshi left his final message on the Bitcointalk forums in December 2010; the last email anyone received from him was in April the following year. He left Gavin Andresen in charge of development, and told the community they were in “good hands.” At this point Bitcoin’s community had grown considerably, which might have encouraged an experienced developer like Malmi to take on even more responsibility, or perhaps even work on Bitcoin full time. But surprisingly, he left less than a year after Satoshi.
Malmi said that after Satoshi left, he found the project “less inspiring and exciting than in the early days, when none of the potential of Bitcoin had yet been realized.”
"I think it was more exciting when nobody knew about it," he said. "Now it's mainstream, it has lots of very skilled developers, so I can do the same as Satoshi and move on to other projects."
Since leaving Bitcoin, Malmi still hangs out in the Bitcoin forums and discusses new developments and controversies as they arise, but he no longer plays a central role in Bitcoin’s development. And he’s thankful for having had the opportunity to work on such an important project.
“Thank you, Satoshi and others who have made Bitcoin what it is today. May it bring peace and prosperity to the world. Long live Bitcoin.”
The Evidence That Martti Malmi Could Be Satoshi
#1 He Has the Technical Ability
Malmi’s degree in computer science, his experience working as a developer, as well as his two years working on Bitcoin more than prove that he has the programming ability to have created Bitcoin.
#2 The Timeline Fits
Malmi was working as a trainee at Siemens when Satoshi developed Bitcoin. He probably had enough spare time to have built Bitcoin in his spare time.
The Evidence That Martti Malmi Likely Isn’t Satoshi
#1 He Says He Isn’t
Each time someone has asked Malmi whether he’s Satoshi, he has politely denied it.
#2 He Worked Closely with Satoshi
So, do you think Martti Malmi created Bitcoin?