UK Court Rules Against Craig Wright’s Claim of Being Satoshi Nakamoto A UK court has rejected Craig Wright’s assertion that he is Satoshi Nakamoto.

Wright’s persistent assertion of being Nakamoto led COPA to seek injunctive action. COPA rejected Wright’s attempt to settle the dispute out of court on January 24th. British judge James Mellor ruled on March 14 that Craig Wright is not Satoshi Nakamoto, as revealed by BitMEX Research. The case brought by COPA against Wright, who has claimed to be Nakamoto since 2016, started closing arguments in London on March 12. Wright’s repeated claims of being Nakamoto were the reason COPA requested injunctive action. Wright has been accused of committing large-scale document fraud for claiming to be the anonymous founder of Bitcoin. This was highlighted in COPA’s final statement.” It has been proven that Wright has lied extensively. He has created a complete fictional life story, generating multiple fake documents to validate it. The trial started on the 5th of February. COPA rejected Wright’s proposal to settle the disagreement out of court on January 24th. Additionally, in 2020, COPA’s creators aimed to eliminate patent obstacles to innovation and encourage the adoption of cryptocurrency technology. A lawsuit was filed by Wright in 2023 against several companies, including Blockstream, Coinbase, and Block, as well as thirteen Bitcoin Core developers, over copyright infringements related to the Bitcoin white paper, file format, and database rights to the Bitcoin blockchain. Additionally, in 2019, Wright sought copyright protection in the US for the Bitcoin white paper and its code, with Coinbase, Block, Meta, MicroStrategy, Kraken, Paradigm, Uniswap, and Worldcoin among the thirty-three members involved. The Bitcoin white paper is available for use and modification under an MIT open-source license, allowing anyone to utilize it for their purposes. Recent crypto news is also featured today.