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A short message from Satoshi Nakamoto, sent exactly 16 years ago, unexpectedly exposed Wall Street's main dead end with Bitcoin today. On July 5, 2010, the creator of the original cryptocurrency, while discussing the technical release of beta version 0.3 on the BitcoinTalk forum and debating pricing, left a phrase that became prophetic for the entire financial world:
"Sorry to be a wet blanket. Writing a description for this thing for general audiences is bloody hard. There's nothing to relate it to."
Sixteen years later, this long-forgotten remark resonated with reality, as big business acknowledged that Bitcoin had finally outgrown familiar economic frameworks. Attempts to measure it through old categories — such as volatile "tech stocks" or classic defensive "digital gold" — repeatedly leads to a dead end.

In particular, Michael Saylor, in his latest manifesto, refused to measure the asset by old templates and offered a new, concise definition — "digital capital".
In his original message, Nakamoto separately emphasized that Bitcoin's value could not be rigidly tied to the cost of electricity, as "It's not stable with respect to energy. It's not tied to the cost of energy."
Even then, the creator of the network indicated that the asset's final form would be shaped solely by market forces.
Why Bitcoin Should Be Measured Only by Its Own Rules
Today, as Bitcoin holds near $63,000, Satoshi's 16-year-old definitional challenge has become a basic property of the market. The same uniqueness that made it difficult for Nakamoto to describe the code in simple words has become a practical reality for funds.
Instead of comparisons with Apple shares or gold bars, the market has moved to the pure mathematics of the protocol. Capital inflows are now calculated directly against the hard limit of 21 million coins, network stability is measured by record hashrate levels, and long-term value is judged by the issuance schedule embedded in the code — one that cannot be changed for the benefit of regulators.
In this context, Satoshi was right, and Bitcoin remains relevant because it has to play only by its own rules.


Dan Burgin
U.Today Editorial Team