A recent episode of the Jack Neel Podcast has sparked renewed discussions about the origins of Bitcoin, following assertions made by Professor Jiang, a Beijing-based educator and host of the popular YouTube channel Predictive History. With over 2.3 million subscribers, Jiang posited that game theory suggests the CIA as the likely creator of Bitcoin. He characterized the cryptocurrency as a surveillance tool conceived by the deep state.
In the podcast, Jiang presented three provocative inquiries: who possesses the technical know-how to create Bitcoin, who stands to gain from its adoption, and the rationale behind the creator’s anonymity. “When you do game theory analysis, you look at all possibilities; you end up with a deep state, the American deep state. You end up with a CIA,” he contended.
He further speculated that institutions such as the CIA might have developed blockchain technology alongside other pivotal innovations like the internet and GPS. This speculation led him to claim that such a framework could serve dual functions: facilitating extensive surveillance and functioning as a covert financial instrument for undisclosed operations. Jiang maintained that anonymity is crucial to preserving trust in the system, asserting that public awareness of government agency involvement could diminish confidence among users.
Jiang raised questions about the physical locations of blockchain servers, suggesting that control over hardware equates to control over software, regardless of the open-source nature of Bitcoin. “I don’t care what they tell me about open source; I want to know where the databases are, where the servers are physically,” he asserted, likening the fervor around blockchain to religious devotion.
His assertions triggered immediate backlash from the cryptocurrency community. Analysts were quick to challenge his views, particularly regarding Bitcoin’s decentralized nature, which operates on a network of thousands of independently run nodes across the globe, thus lacking a central point of failure. One analyst remarked, “Bitcoin is ultimately an IQ test, and this ‘Professor’ has failed. It’s been 17 years, and they still fail to understand the basics.”
Critics, including Ansel Lindner, dismissed Jiang’s views as reflective of a deeper misunderstanding about decentralization. He expressed that such narratives often stem from individuals struggling to grasp the underlying principles of cryptocurrencies, particularly Bitcoin’s transparency and independence from any single creator’s influence. Investor and author Lyn Alden echoed this sentiment, commenting on the irrelevance of Bitcoin’s origin in assessing its value.
Previous analyses of Jiang’s claims indicate that they align more with conspiracy theories rather than concrete evidence regarding Bitcoin’s genesis. Up to this point, no credible links have surfaced connecting Bitcoin’s creation to U.S. intelligence agencies such as DARPA or the Pentagon.
The mystery surrounding the identity of Bitcoin’s creator, known only by the pseudonym Satoshi Nakamoto, has been a longstanding topic of speculation. Numerous candidates have been suggested, with a recent New York Times investigation proposing Blockstream CEO Adam Back as a prominent contender, though Back has openly refuted these claims.
As debates continue to unfold within the crypto landscape, the discussion around Bitcoin’s origins remains a contentious and evolving narrative.


