Satoshi Coins Reassignment: The eCash Hard Fork 2026 and the War for Bitcoin's Soul
In April 2026, the "sacred cow" of the crypto world—the untouchability of Satoshi Nakamoto’s wallets—came under fire. The eCash project, spearheaded by LayerTwo Labs CEO Paul Sztorc, officially proposed a mechanism to redistribute the 1.1 million BTC that have stood as a "digital monument" for over 15 years.
To some, this is the network's salvation; to others, it is the greatest heist in blockchain history.
What is the eCash Hard Fork?
eCash is a Bitcoin fork scheduled for August 2026. Unlike the Bitcoin Cash split of 2017, eCash focuses on activating dormant capital rather than block size.
The Proposal: Reassign a portion of Satoshi’s original block rewards (roughly 600,000 tokens on the new chain) to a development fund and early contributors.
The Tech: The fork will implement BIP300 and BIP301 (Drivechains), aiming to turn Bitcoin into a multi-layered functional platform.
The Case for Reassignment: Quantum Security & Development
Paul Sztorc argues that reassignment is not theft but a "sanitary necessity."
The "Zombie Project" Risk: Without active funding, Bitcoin risks losing the arms race against AI and quantum computing.
The Quantum Threat: Satoshi’s coins reside in vulnerable legacy addresses. If not forcibly "migrated" to quantum-resistant vaults via a fork, they could be drained by the first powerful quantum computer, crashing the entire market.
The Case Against: Breaking the Social Contract
The reaction at the Bitcoin 2026 conference in Las Vegas was overwhelmingly hostile.
Peter McCormack and David Schwartz have decried the move as "theft" and "disrespectful" to the creator.
Erosion of Trust: If Satoshi’s coins can be reassigned, anyone’s can. This destroys Bitcoin’s core value proposition: "Code is Law" and absolute immutability.
Market Impact and the $80,000 Wall
The "reassignment" narrative is a primary reason BTC hit a ceiling at $80,000 this month. Investors fear that establishing a precedent for the "forced movement of funds"—even on a fork—undermines the concept of absolute digital property rights.