https://cointelegraph.com/news/renowned-cryptographer-says-his-patent-was-an-obstacle-for-hal-finney

Renowned Cryptographer Says His Patent Was an Obstacle for Hal Finney
Okamoto explains why his “electronic cash” patent may have presented obstacles 
to Hal Finney’s plans to make his own electronic currency.

Jul 04, 2020
Okamoto explains why his “electronic cash” patent may have presented obstacles 
to Hal Finney’s plans to make his own electronic currency.

Tatsuaki Okamoto explains why his “electronic cash” patent might have presented 
an obstacle to Hal Finney in his ambition to create his own electronic currency.

Six key patents

Sometime before Dec. 6, 2004, Hal Finney did a search in a patent database on 
“blind-signature based cash systems”. On his site he posted a list of six such 
patents:

“This might be useful for those considering implementing electronic cash.”

Four of the patents are authored by David Chaum, the other two by Okamoto and 
his colleague at Nippon Telegraph Kazuo Ohta.



Ecash patents by Dr. Okamoto & his Nippon Telegraph colleague Dr. Kazuo Ohta. 
Source: finney.org (via WayBack Machine)

Okamoto currently serves as director of the Cryptography & Information Security 
Lab at NTT Research and holds over 100 patents. We asked him to explain why his 
patent might have presented an obstacle to Hal Finney and other cypherpunks in 
their ambition of creating a decentralized currency, considering that his 
patent involves an intermediary.

Okamoto’s ecash & Nakamoto’s Bitcoin

Okamoto kindly prepared diagrams elucidating the differences between the ecash 
system outlined in his patent and Bitcoin (BTC).



Diagram: Electronic Cash described in Patent 49775595. Source: NTT Research



Diagram: Bitcoin. Source: NTT Research

Both solutions use public keys as pseudonymous identities and private keys to 
authorize transactions. However, in Okamoto’s proposal, a trusted party varies 
transactions, whereas Bitcoin is trustless, with all nodes verifying 
transactions.

Trustless system — no trivial achievement

Considering this key difference, one might ponder — why Finney and other 
pioneers were so paranoid about patent infringement? One obvious answer is that 
Satoshi Nakamoto’s Bitcoin proposal was the first successful framework for a 
trustless electronic cash system. Coming up with it was not a trivial 
achievement; almost 30 years passed between the introduction of Chaum’s 
DigiCash and Nakamoto’s Bitcoin.

Did “Okamoto” give ideas to Finney for “Nakamoto?”

Many believe Finney to be Satoshi Nakamoto or at least part of the team that 
was behind the moniker. Besides his interests, expertise and early Bitcoin 
involvement, another fact strongly supports this theory — being a neighbor of 
Dorian Satoshi Nakamoto. Considering that Google cannot return a single query 
for Satoshi Nakamoto before the Bitcoin proposal was publicized, this 
coincidence is eerie. If Finney, indeed was behind the pseudonym Satoshi 
Nakamoto, his familiarity with the works of Tatsuaki Okamoto might have also 
played a role in the choice of the alias.

Okamoto told Cointelegraph that he was never a part of the famous cryptographic 
mailing lists and did not know Hal Finney personally.

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