The Human Rights Foundation, in collaboration with the Finney family, has awarded Pieter Wuille and Gregory Maxwell the prestigious Finney Freedom Prize for their groundbreaking contributions to Bitcoin usability, scalability, and privacy. The prize recognises their work during the 2012-2016 era, corresponding to Bitcoin’s block height of 210,000 to 420,000.
The Finney Freedom Prize honours individuals who advance the computer as a tool for protecting individual freedoms worldwide, following in the footsteps of Bitcoin pioneer Hal Finney, who was the first recipient of the award.
An independent committee selected Wuille and Maxwell from a shortlist that included notable bitcoin contributors such as Andreas Antonopoulos, Roya Mahboob, and Ross Ulbricht.
As open-source software, Bitcoin relies on voluntary contributors to maintain, review, and improve its codebase. Unlike a traditional company, bitcoin has no central authority, making the work of developers like Wuille and Maxwell critical to its continued success. Both have played pivotal roles in ensuring bitcoin remains robust, secure, and a practical tool for financial freedom.
“Wuille and Maxwell’s efforts have demonstrably made bitcoin a practical human rights tool for millions of people, especially so many who labor under authoritarian regimes and financial repression across the globe,” the Finney Freedom Prize announcement stated.
Their contributions have helped bitcoin become a powerful financial resource for individuals worldwide, particularly those in repressive environments.
The laureates will split a monetary prize of 100,000,000 satoshis (1 bitcoin), and each will receive a Finney Freedom Prize statue designed by Cryptograffiti.
The next Finney Freedom Laureate, covering the 2016-2020 era (Block Height 420,000 to 630,000), will be announced on January 10, 2026.