The ongoing debate surrounding the upcoming eCash fork, scheduled for August at block height 964,000, has sparked significant controversy within the Bitcoin community. Central to this unfolding drama is Paul Sztorc’s clarification that he is not attempting to move Satoshi Nakamoto’s Bitcoin, though this critical point appears to be overshadowed by the fallout from his proposal.
eCash intends to create a parallel blockchain that mirrors Bitcoin’s history up to the designated block height, allowing Bitcoin holders to receive an equivalent amount of eCash. For example, someone holding 4.19 BTC would receive 4.19 eCash. This approach follows the precedent set by previous forks such as Bitcoin Cash and Bitcoin SV, which similarly duplicated Bitcoin’s ledger but altered its rules in a bid to gain market traction.
However, eCash’s approach diverges from its predecessors in a significant way concerning the allocation of Satoshi Nakamoto’s dormant coins. An estimated 1.1 million BTC linked to Nakamoto remain untouched in addresses identified through the Patoshi pattern, a mining fingerprint commonly attributed to him, albeit without definitive proof. In a typical fork, those original addresses would automatically receive the full share of the forked coins. Instead, Sztorc plans to allocate only 600,000 eCash to Satoshi’s addresses while redirecting the remaining 500,000 eCash to investors who back the project prior to its launch.
Sztorc, CEO of LayerTwo Labs, has vehemently rejected accusations of theft, stating unequivocally in a recent post that “We do not take any of Satoshi’s BTC.” He emphasized that accessing BTC requires its specific software and private keys, which are unavailable to his team. Despite his assurances, the philosophical implications of utilizing Satoshi’s dormant coins to fund a new venture raise substantial ethical questions. The core of Bitcoin’s appeal lies in its unwavering commitment to property rights, a principle that advocates argue is undermined when the original creator’s holdings are handled in any manner that could be construed as violating those rights.
The timing of these debates only intensifies the controversy. Recent discussions within the Bitcoin community have already been focused on proposals to restrict or freeze old coins that are vulnerable to quantum attacks, which include addresses believed to belong to Satoshi. These ongoing discussions have brought themes of immutability, dormant balances, and social intervention back into sharp relief, making the eCash proposal particularly contentious.
Vijay Selvam, an author and Bitcoin commentator, expressed deep concerns about the long-term implications of freezing Satoshi’s coins, framing it as a precedent that could irrevocably damage Bitcoin’s integrity as a monetary system. He articulated that by allowing any intervention concerning dormant coins, the foundational promise of Bitcoin as a reliable store of value may be compromised. “If you set a rug-pull precedent for Bitcoin, you’d forever kill its claim to being durable and immutable digital gold,” he asserted.
Sztorc’s motivations for proposing eCash stem from his previous efforts to introduce Drivechains—proposals aimed at integrating sidechains into Bitcoin through BIP300 and BIP301—efforts that have not gained traction within the Bitcoin Core community. With little indication that those proposals will be adopted before the eCash launch, the fork has emerged as both an alternative strategy and a pressure tactic.
While many forks have ultimately fallen short of achieving meaningful market relevance, they often serve as litmus tests for Bitcoin’s underlying social principles. As the time for eCash’s launch approaches, the community is left grappling with difficult questions: Can a fork genuinely claim Bitcoin’s moral legacy if it alters the treatment of Satoshi’s untouched holdings? The debate is poised to challenge the foundational ideologies surrounding Bitcoin and the principles of property rights that lie at its core.


