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Bitcoin => Bitcoin Technical Support => Topic started by: baggage on November 30, 2013, 09:25:36 PM



Title: My Paper Wallet confusion
Post by: baggage on November 30, 2013, 09:25:36 PM
I generated a paper wallet at Bitaddress and sent my bit coin to it.  It says I can check it's balance by going to the block chain and entering the new address.

When I do that I get "first bits not found."   So how does one go about checking to see if the bit coin is there?


Title: Re: My Paper Wallet confusion
Post by: flatfly on November 30, 2013, 09:28:26 PM
I generated a paper wallet at Bitaddress and sent my bit coin to it.  It says I can check it's balance by going to the block chain and entering the new address.

When I do that I get "first bits not found."   So how does one go about checking to see if the bit coin is there?

Are you sure you're entering the full (33-34 characters, starts with '1') address at blockchain.info?


Title: Re: My Paper Wallet confusion
Post by: baggage on November 30, 2013, 09:56:04 PM
I generated a paper wallet at Bitaddress and sent my bit coin to it.  It says I can check it's balance by going to the block chain and entering the new address.

When I do that I get "first bits not found."   So how does one go about checking to see if the bit coin is there?

Are you sure you're entering the full (33-34 characters, starts with '1') address at blockchain.info?

Thank you, that be it.

One more question: Bitaddress generated my private keys, but do I not need to invent a password as well or is my private keys my password?


Title: Re: My Paper Wallet confusion
Post by: Abdussamad on December 01, 2013, 07:32:32 AM
I generated a paper wallet at Bitaddress and sent my bit coin to it.  It says I can check it's balance by going to the block chain and entering the new address.

When I do that I get "first bits not found."   So how does one go about checking to see if the bit coin is there?

Are you sure you're entering the full (33-34 characters, starts with '1') address at blockchain.info?

Thank you, that be it.

One more question: Bitaddress generated my private keys, but do I not need to invent a password as well or is my private keys my password?

Private keys are all you need to spend the coins. You can create encrypted private keys as well if you want added protection. See this post for an overview:

https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=353705.msg3787633#msg3787633

Avoid brain wallets though. Personally I would recommend install electrum or armory on an offline PC rather than using bitaddress to generate private keys of any sort.


Title: Re: My Paper Wallet confusion
Post by: neutrinox on December 01, 2013, 07:33:41 AM
The private key is your password if you have a basic paper wallet.

That said, there is now also a way of password protecting the paper wallet, so that nobody can spend the bitcoins in the paper wallet without knowing the password to it. There is a tutorial for that at http://oneminutevideotutorials.com/?cat=25