Bitcoin Forum

Other => MultiBit => Topic started by: Miner687 on March 18, 2014, 09:01:29 PM



Title: Help me :( lost a thousand pounds trying to back my coins up
Post by: Miner687 on March 18, 2014, 09:01:29 PM
I recently bought £1000 of bitcoins. I had no password on my wallet.

Whilst trying to transfer my wallet to a USB stick, something happened which I don't know exactly what, but my Wallet is now saying I have a password.

I can still view my wallet but I cannot transact because I have no clue of what the password is and you need that to do anything. :(

Please help... I know I can download programmes to try crack it but I don't know any part of the password
 which I've heard makes it almost impossible for it work in any reasonable amount of time

Any help from anyone with advice very welcome!! :(




Title: Re: Help me :( lost a thousand pounds trying to back my coins up
Post by: Sammot on March 18, 2014, 09:06:50 PM
Which client you used? Bitcoin-qt?


Title: Re: Help me :( lost a thousand pounds trying to back my coins up
Post by: meanig on March 18, 2014, 09:08:17 PM
What wallet were you using? Multibit, Bitcoin-qt, etc?


Title: Re: Help me :( lost a thousand pounds trying to back my coins up
Post by: Miner687 on March 18, 2014, 09:11:09 PM
No, multibit


Title: Re: Help me :( lost a thousand pounds trying to back my coins up
Post by: Gareth Nelson on March 18, 2014, 09:14:41 PM
Before doing anything else:
1 - stop your wallet software
2 - backup all the related files using normal OS commands
3 - seperately backup the backup you made earlier

You don't want to make things worse by corrupting those files in any form.

Next, get pywallet, run the --restore option on both wallet files, you may get lucky.


Title: Re: Help me :( lost a thousand pounds trying to back my coins up
Post by: Coinster on March 18, 2014, 09:20:34 PM
Try this:

http://www.walletrecoveryservices.com/

They specialize in your sort of problem, forgotten password, and are reputable. If you didn't intentionally set a password I'm thinking some keystrokes may have accidentally set one, meaning it shouldn't be long. If it's less than about 8 characters there is a chance it can be found (brute forced) even if you have no idea what it is.

I also echo what Gareth said above.


Title: Re: Help me :( lost a thousand pounds trying to back my coins up
Post by: meanig on March 18, 2014, 09:23:57 PM
You should post this to the Multibit subforum https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?board=99.0 (https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?board=99.0)

Someone might have encountered and solved a similar problem.


Title: Re: Help me :( lost a thousand pounds trying to back my coins up
Post by: btc2doge on February 22, 2023, 06:42:28 AM
I recently bought £1000 of bitcoins. I had no password on my wallet.

Whilst trying to transfer my wallet to a USB stick, something happened which I don't know exactly what, but my Wallet is now saying I have a password.

I can still view my wallet but I cannot transact because I have no clue of what the password is and you need that to do anything. :(

Please help... I know I can download programmes to try crack it but I don't know any part of the password
 which I've heard makes it almost impossible for it work in any reasonable amount of time

Any help from anyone with advice very welcome!! :(


there is a chance that your wallet is get encrypted by an empty sting. although it is empty string, does not mean it is space. if you leave it blank. it keep asking. one of my client met the password issue on its dogecoin wallet. if yu did not set password, there is high chance your wallet got encrypted by the empty string. this can be an approach to try. not sure your case.