A renewed conversation within the Bitcoin community has emerged, focusing on a contentious proposal to redistribute early Bitcoin holdings associated with the mysterious “Patoshi” pattern. This plan, put forward by Paul Sztorc, the CEO of LayerTwo Labs, suggests a bold hard fork to shift control of around 500,000 BTC believed to be linked to Bitcoin’s enigmatic creator, Satoshi Nakamoto. These assets, while thought to be Nakamoto’s, remain verifiably unclaimed due to a lack of concrete evidence of ownership.
What is the eCash Project?
Under this proposal, a new blockchain called “eCash” would be established. It would replicate Bitcoin’s transaction history but would change ownership of the aforementioned early Bitcoins, aiming to redirect them to a fresh pool of stakeholders. Existing Bitcoin users would find their balances mirrored on eCash without altering the original Bitcoin ledger.
How Does the Market React?
Paul Sztorc stated that the initiative intends to invigorate the eCash project by redistributing these coins: “This is simply a copy of Bitcoin, and a totally new chain. Existing Bitcoin balances will be mirrored exactly at the moment of the eCash fork.”
Industry expert Jameson Lopp rejects the notion of this fork as just another Bitcoin transaction. He emphasizes that it’s an independent blockchain event, reminiscent of past forks like Bitcoin Cash in 2017, which created new paths while leaving the original blockchain untouched.
Despite the fork, BTC ownership on the primary blockchain remains unchanged. However, Bitcoin holders would receive equal measures of eCash, their value dictated by future market dynamics and user engagement.
Could Dormant Coins Pose Threats?
Another layer to this debate is the fate of approximately 5.6 million dormant BTC. Concerns arise that advancements in quantum computing might vulnerably expose these immobile treasures, prompting discussions on whether proactive measures are necessary to preserve the sanctity of Bitcoin holdings.
Critics of such interventions argue that tampering with coin ownership contradicts the ethos of Bitcoin’s decentralized and immutable nature, suggesting that any changes, even on a parallel fork, could erode trust.
Technically, altering Bitcoin’s principal chain requires unified community support. The success of eCash and similar ventures hinges on acceptance by users, exchanges, and industry influencers, without which the new coin may lack viability.



