Yeah, unless for some strange reason they set you as the coinbase for the mined block you'll be fine.
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Do they even have the private keys for the addresses? I thought that the .gov had not recovered those. If they don't have them, they won't be selling...
Yes, they've already moved them to another address.
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You can check bitcoinwisdom.com for current rates of the various exchanges.
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You can even send bitcoins to an address that no one has the private key for (just pick a random address). Then no one can spend those coins ever.
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When you get confused where the programs are installed just type which <program> and it'll tell you. So which bitcoin-qt will tell you where that executable is located.
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The only way would be to steal your 2 factor secret code or to use a man in the middle attack. It's much more likely that they get into your account through means other than directly logging in.
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Hi
just wondering if heartbleed is any cause for concern regarding changing my wallets current password, I have never used the 0.9.0 client still on version 0.8.6
will downloading the newest version 0.9.1 fix any of the data leaking concerns/possible theft of bitcoin?
thanks
Since you are running a version older than 0.9.0, you are only at risk if you are running the rpcssl command line option, or have entered that option into your bitcoin.conf. If you don't know what that is, then you are almost certainly not using it, and therefore don't have to worry about your Bitcoin-Qt being affected by the Heartbleed bug. You'd also have to have that port open to the world. Though if you had any port using openssl open to the world then you were vulnerable.
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Were you just sending 0.00014017 to 1QB6 and the 133tg is your change address?
I'm confused about this reply, it gives me hope that I am just unknowledgeable about BTC and BTC wallets. Could '133tgZXxeJGnoWc467jStKTvj8PB1Hs9kS' be my change address? Was this bitcoin stolen from me? That is why I came to this forum to find out if I had my BTC stolen from my BTC address of 1LW3QuLxkyp92HGvMFio4eYY6puxmnGSDa and xfer'ed to:133tgZXxeJGnoWc467jStKTvj8PB1Hs9kS. I will admit I do not fully understand how the wallet works, and when you call it a "Change address" it gives me hope that my BTC is still retrievable. Is it? Or has it been stolen? Thank you for your help BTW, i have installed Electrum... Also, I have never exported my private keys. That was my hope, but reading your latest post that the coins were moved somewhere else, then they were definitely stolen.
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You shouldn't need to use 0.91. You can import the wallet.dat in a number of ways:
Copy it to a USB drive on the host, then connect the drive to the guest Create a shared drive (I've never used parallels before so I don't know what this involves) Scp it over Put it on dropbox Email it to yourself
Obviously some are more / less secure and easy/ more difficult (scp is probably the best I think)
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Were you just sending 0.00014017 to 1QB6 and the 133tg is your change address?
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Sure, go ahead and calculate what 41 + 0.001 + 0.0001 + 0.00001 + 0.000001 is
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If you start mining today with 10TH it'll take a little less than a month to get 15 BTC. Overall you'll make about 41 BTC.
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It's not too difficult to run the scripts. I'm not sure which salt method you're talking about though. Beware of anyone who wants you to send your wallet to them.
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If you know which 4 to change then it should be pretty fast to crack it. Those scripts should be all you need.
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well, the target is "C:\Program Files (x86)\Armory_0-91\ArmoryQt.exe" --satoshi-datadir=“L:\Data\bitcoin__0_9_1” --datadir=“L:\Data\Armory_0_91" Your quotes are all messed up. The first two are straight, second ones are diagonal and the third has mixed. Try with all normal quotes.
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As far as I know:
Private ECDSA key: 256 bits generate public key from that: 2 32 byte numbers SHA-256 hash of public key: 256 bits RIPEMD-160 hash of that: 160 bits SHA-256 hash that twice and encode in base 58 to get your address.
Throw in some checksums and magic numbers along the way.
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(I'm sure he'll start PMing everyone in this thread to send BTC too)
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I can escrow, but it's pretty clear it's a scam.
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Stealth addresses are similar too.
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