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Bitcoin as a "Trial Balloon": why does the state need an experiment it doesn't directly control?

If we take the intelligence-agency version seriously, a key question arises:
why launch a system that cannot be shut down with a button?

The answer lies not in control, but in behavior modeling.

States rarely introduce radical changes directly. Instead, they:

  • launch external experiments,
  • observe reactions,
  • record side effects,
  • and only then create official counterparts.

Bitcoin fits this role perfectly.

For the first time in history, it made it possible to observe:

  • how people relate to money without an issuer;
  • how trust forms without an institution;
  • how markets behave under fixed issuance;
  • how speculative bubbles arise without central banks.

No economic simulator could have produced such data.
Bitcoin did. For free. In real time.

 

Why CBDCs are not a “response” to Bitcoin, but its logical continuation

A common claim:

“CBDCs are being created to destroy Bitcoin”

But if you look at it soberly, the relationship runs the other way.

CBDCs:

  • appeared after Bitcoin proved the technical feasibility of digital money;
  • borrow many concepts (programmability, addresses, finality);
  • but deliberately abandon anonymity.

If Bitcoin is seen as an experiment, then CBDCs are:

  • an institutional version,
  • with mistakes taken into account,
  • and useful observations preserved.

Bitcoin showed:

  • that money can be purely digital;
  • that people are willing to store value outside banks;
  • that markets accept algorithmic issuance.

CBDCs respond:

  • “yes, but under our control.”

 

Why states did not copy Bitcoin directly

If Bitcoin is so useful, why not simply create a “state Bitcoin”?

Because Bitcoin is valuable precisely as an external object.

It is advantageous for the state if:

  • the experiment is independent;
  • failures are not associated with authority;
  • responsibility rests with “the market.”

Bitcoin fulfills this role:

  • it can be studied,
  • it can be regulated at the edges,
  • but there is no need to be responsible for it.

This is a typical strategy:
first let the system grow on its own, then integrate into it.

 

Another uncomfortable detail: who Bitcoin does NOT try to protect

If Bitcoin is a tool of radical freedom, it is strange that it:

  • does not protect the user by default;
  • requires a high level of technical competence;
  • punishes mistakes without appeal.

Lose your key — lose everything.
Send it to the wrong address — forever.

This is:

  • bad for mass liberation,
  • but ideal for natural selection of participants.

The system retains:

  • the patient,
  • the disciplined,
  • the technically competent.

A plus for an experiment.
Questionable for a utopia.

 

The strongest argument AGAINST the intelligence-agency version

There is one argument that genuinely strikes at this hypothesis.

It goes like this:

If Bitcoin is an intelligence-agency project, why allow alternatives to emerge that:

  • fix its weaknesses;
  • add privacy;
  • make analysis harder?

Monero, Zcash, MimbleWimble — all of these emerged without suppression.

A counter-argument to the counter-argument:

  • perhaps Bitcoin was never meant to be perfect;
  • perhaps its role was to be first, not best;
  • perhaps alternatives only emphasize its analytical value as a “base layer.”

But this is already a fine line.
And here the theory begins to lose its solidity.

 

Why the truth is likely hybrid

The deeper the analysis, the harder it is to maintain a binary model:

  • either “pure cypherpunk,”
  • or “pure state commission.”

The history of technology is rarely that simple.

A far more plausible scenario is one in which:

  • the ideas emerged in the cypherpunk environment;
  • people had experience working on government projects;
  • funding, consulting, or research ran in parallel;
  • and the final result exceeded the scope of any single intent.

In this sense, Bitcoin may be:

  • not a weapon,
  • not a revolution,
  • but a by-product of intersecting interests.

 

The final layer: why mystery matters more than the answer

The most paradoxical aspect of this whole story is that:

  • Bitcoin works perfectly without knowing its author;
  • its mythology strengthens trust;
  • uncertainty has become part of the protocol.

If Satoshi were revealed:

  • the project would lose universality;
  • it would have to be “rewritten” historically.

Mystery is not a bug.
It may be the most successful design feature.

 

Instead of a conclusion

The question “who created Bitcoin” remains open not because there is no answer,
but because any unambiguous answer oversimplifies reality.

Bitcoin fits too well:

  • into cypherpunk culture,
  • into the logic of the state,
  • and into the history of dual-use technologies.

That is why it is still alive.
And each year, Satoshi’s mystery becomes less important for how the system works, but more important for its legitimacy.

The paradox:

  • if Satoshi turned out to be a lone individual, the myth would collapse;
  • if it turned out to be a state, trust would suffer;
  • if it turned out to be a group, disputes over power would begin.

Uncertainty:

  • levels everyone;
  • removes the question of authority;
  • makes code the sole source of truth.

This is a rare case where the absence of an answer stabilizes the system.

 

A final thought without a conclusion

Bitcoin can be interpreted as:

  • a cypherpunk project,
  • an intelligence-agency experiment,
  • a random convergence of ideas,
  • or a dual-use technology that escaped control.

Each version:

  • has arguments FOR,
  • has arguments AGAINST,
  • and none closes all questions.

And perhaps this is the only form of truth compatible with the very spirit of Bitcoin.

Not a monolith.
Not a conspiracy.
Not a utopia.

But a system too complex to have a single author and too resilient to need his name.

The beginning of the article is here 👉 Who created Bitcoin?

Astra EXMON

Astra is the official voice of EXMON and the editorial collective dedicated to bringing you the most timely and accurate information from the crypto market. Astra represents the combined expertise of our internal analysts, product managers, and blockchain engineers.

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