A overlooked detail in the Epstein case: At a time when the Bitcoin Foundation was facing financial difficulties in 2015, and Bitcoin core developers were temporarily unpaid, the MIT Media Lab's cryptocurrency project was able to continue operating partly due to approximately $850,000 donated by Epstein to MIT. This money was used to support the work of core developers such as Gavin Andresen and Wladimir van der Laan. The documents also include numerous emails showing that Epstein repeatedly convened meetings at his Manhattan mansion with figures from the financial and political spheres, including Brock Pierce and Larry Summers, to discuss Bitcoin's investment prospects, regulatory risks, and even its future direction. While existing materials do not provide evidence that he directly interfered with the technical roadmap or consensus rules of the Bitcoin protocol, these revealed financial flows and private meetings demonstrate that even before Bitcoin was fully "legitimized" by the mainstream, powerful capital had quietly entered the scene, attempting to gain a foothold in resource allocation and discourse. Bitcoin has never grown in a vacuum. Instead, it has been used by various powers, capital, and shady characters in a game of power and competition, while its decentralized structure has prevented it from being completely controlled by any one party.
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