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"map_content": "BREAKING\ud83d\udea8: Crushing and definitive victory for Craig Wright! (Satoshi Coins Case US \ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8 Federal Court):\r\n \r\nFor the US federal court, it does not hear any partnership in the creation of #bitcoin between Craig Wright and Dave Kleiman, and it also does not hear any error in the court's decision and the case is officially closed! This was a definitive answer to IRA KLEIMAN's appeal!\r\n\r\n\"UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS\r\nFOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT.\"\r\n\r\nThe Estate of David Kleiman (\u201cEstate\u201d) sued Craig Wright, an Australian computer scientist, claiming that (David) Kleiman and Wright, who were friends, formed a partnership to develop the original Bitcoin protocol, to mine bitcoin, and to develop related blockchain technology. The Estate asserts that it is entitled to half of the bitcoins\u2014purportedly worth billions\u2014mined\r\nthrough the alleged partnership.\r\n\r\n\"This appeal involves an ownership dispute stemming from the origins of the Bitcoin.\"\r\n\r\n\"A jury ultimately found that no partnership existed and returned a verdict against the Estate, which now appeals.1 \" \r\n\r\nhttps://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.flsd.521536/gov.uscourts.flsd.521536.1061.0_4.pdf\r\n\r\nUnder penalty of perjury, Craig Wright testified before the court under oath that he mined the first 70 blocks of Bitcoin and that he received the necessary information and key to unlock the encrypted Tulip trust!\r\n\r\nNow Craig Wright has free access to Satoshi's fortune!\r\n\r\n\"A. Background \r\nDuring litigation, the Estate sought discovery from Wright about his bitcoin holdings, which it believed were relevant to establish the universe of bitcoin mined during the alleged partnership between David Kleiman and Wright. A magistrate judge broadly agreed and, on March 14, 2019, ordered Wright to produce a list of\r\nhis bitcoin holdings as of the last day in 2013, the year David died.\r\n\r\nWright resisted, asserting that the information was impossible to produce. The gist of his position, as developed over several filings and in testimony at an evidentiary hearing, was as follows.\r\n\r\nIn 2011 or 2012, Wright transferred ownership of all bitcoin he had mined or acquired or would acquire to the Tulip Trust, of which he was both a trustee and beneficiary. Information about the Trust\u2019s bitcoin was locked in an encrypted file protected by a \u201cShamir\u2019s Secret Sharing Algorithm\u201d\u2014an algorithm created by Adi Shamir to divide a secret, such as a private encryption key, into multiple parts. The key to the encrypted file was split into fifteen \u201ckey slices\u201d and distributed through the Trust. Wright controlled seven of the eight key slices required to access the bitcoin address information, and so was without access on his own. Nonetheless, Wright indicated that, based on an arrangement with David before his death, he expected to receive another key slice by bonded courier in 2020.\"\r\n\r\n\"Just four days later, Wright filed a notice stating that \u201ca third party has provided the necessary information and key slice to unlock the encrypted file,\u201d and that he had \u201cproduced a list of his bitcoin holdings, as ordered by the [m]agistrate [j]udge, to plaintiffs today.\u201d\" \r\n\r\nHere's a big mistake when most people think Craig used inaccurate addresses for Sastohi's fortune, but what actually happened was this: \"There were tens of thousands of addresses that Shadders compiled as an ESTIMATE for the judge. It's impossible to know all the exact addresses, so all possible addresses were compiled together. Only 140 of those did not belong to SN.\"\r\n\r\nUnder penalty of perjury, Craig has testified to the court that he mined the first 70 Bitcoin blocks: https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.flsd.521536/gov.uscourts.flsd.521536.211.0.pdf \r\n\r\nDr. Wright has done everything possible and necessary to comply with the Court\u2019s\r\nOrders dated May 3, 2019 [D.E. 166], and May 6, 2019 [D.E. 172] (the \u201cOrders\u201d). produced a list of bitcoin \r\n\r\n\" For example, Dr. Wright hired one of the foremost discovery vendors, AlixPartners, to collect\r\ndigital data from Dr. Wright\u2019s electronic devices.\"\r\n\r\n2. The Trusts Are Designed to Hold Secret the Information and Assets They Received Dr. Wright is the best person to explain the complex manner by which bitcoin was mined and held in the trust. We propose that he do so at a court supervised deposition by\r\nvideoconference or in London. \r\n\r\nAn overview, in lay person\u2019s terms, of the manner in which the trust assumed ownership of the rights to the bitcoin mined by Dr. Wright from 2009 through\r\n2010 is set forth here.\r\n\r\nAfter Dr. Wright mined the first 70 blocks of bitcoin (the public addresses for which he has already disclosed), he implemented a unique and proprietary algorithm that he created to automate the key generation process so that each later block mined (after block 70) was assigned a different public address. \r\n\r\nFrom 2009 through 2010, he could view the many public addresses assigned to bitcoin he mined from block 71 (starting in 2009 to 2010) by accessing the bitcoin software on the computing devices he was then using for bitcoin mining. In about June 2011, Dr. Wright placed into an encrypted file 1) the bitcoin software he used; 2) software components for additional bitcoin applications; 3) his proprietary algorithm; and 4) other data from which information about bitcoin mined after block 70 could be re-generated.4 Dr. Wright long ago\r\ndisposed of all computing devices he used to mine bitcoin in 2009 and 2010, and did not keep any list of the public addresses associated with the bitcoin he mined after block 70.\r\n\r\n 4 Dr. Wright ceased mining by the end of 2010. At that time, the value of bitcoin fluctuated between $0.06 and $0.29 (August 30, 2010 and December 27, 2010).\r\nhttps://buybitcoinworldwide.com/price/. Last accessed June 7, 2019. Indeed, at that time, the cost of mining, and the cost of the machines used to mine, far exceeded the value of bitcoin.\r\n\r\nThe value of a bitcoin on June 27, 2011 was $16.13, and on October 29, 2012 was $10.74. Id.\r\nholdings.\r\n\r\n#CraigISSatoshi \ud83d\udc09\ud83e\udee1\r\n\r\n#Bitcoin #BSV #Satoshi",
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