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Unsurprisingly, Got Satoshi turned out to be another Bitcoin-fueled marketing stunt Unsurprisingly, Got Satoshi turned out to be another Bitcoin-fueled marketing stunt
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Unsurprisingly, Got Satoshi turned out to be another Bitcoin-fueled marketing stunt

Unsurprisingly, Got Satoshi turned out to be another Bitcoin-fueled marketing stunt

Cover art/illustration via CryptoSlate. Image includes combined content which may include AI-generated content.

A website that claimed to know the true identity of Bitcoin’s true creator, Got Satoshi, turned out to be a marketing stunt planned and executed to promote a new crypto news outlet. The Satoshi that was revealed wasn’t a real person but instead was an “AI-powered” news anchor.

A website claiming to know Satoshi Nakamoto’s identity disappoints

Got Satoshi, an online social media campaign that promised to reveal the true identity of Bitcoin’s creator Satoshi Nakamoto turned out to be nothing more than a cheap marketing trick.

Satoshi Nakamoto turns out to be a vaguely caucasian AI news anchor

Launched last month, the one-page website gotsatoshi.com hosted a countdown timer that was scheduled to end on May 14th, when the ‘true’ identity of Satoshi would finally be revealed. The website was short on details, but a connected Twitter account has been actively posting for a couple of weeks, trying to create hype around the identity reveal.

The Got Satoshi campaign didn’t attract a very large audience, nor did it manage to convince anyone that it actually had anything important to reveal.

And while few expected anything but a scam, the final reveal was even more disappointing than anyone could have thought, as it turned out to be a poorly planned advertisement for a newly launched crypto news outlet.

PAI news debuts AI-driven anchor, the internet spares no effort to mock

It turned out that the Got Satoshi website was made to create a hype around the launch of PAI News and its AI-powered news anchor named Satoshi. The (shameless) 3D rendering of ‘Satoshi’ was created by ObEN, an artificial intelligence company, and it was announced as the world’s first “AI-powered news anchor in the world.”

The person behind the Got Satoshi twitter account said John McAfee, the creator of the eponymous anti-virus software, might be aware of who he is, but has been firm in his assertion that he is not Craig Wright.

McAfee, however, warned his followers that the website was trolling them even before the reveal.

The PAI News marketing campaign is yet another example of using sensationalism to promote and boost a product that’s bound to disappoint. This is not the first time, nor the last, that the brand around Satoshi Nakamoto and Bitcoin will be used to promote dubious products.

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