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Author Topic: Think the price of Bitcoin to be what it will be in 30 years when securing coin  (Read 1330 times)
coinbeast (OP)
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September 10, 2015, 02:21:59 AM
 #1

I am a very private bitcoin miner. I don't "believe" bitcoin will be worth a lot of money one day. I feel more that I "know" it will.

I truly believe that one day people will scour the internet forums and anywhere else where they can short list people who have been involved in the bitcoin community for a long time and are likely to be holding a stash of bitcoin.

People could physically threaten you or your family, attack your house, or perhaps hack you.

Maybe someone you know in the physical world may try to rob you?

I welcome any discussion of how you think it best to secure your wallet/s.

I currently have 2 thumb drives which I consider my "bank" wallet. Which is empty, but still, it's there for when I need to send to it. I have them encrypted in a winrar file, then the wallet itself encrypted with something near impossible to find, then that wallet is then broken up into fragments and embedded into a bunch of wedding photos. Probably overkill, but still, why not... I think I should also make a copy of this to a microsd and a small cd.

Hardware failure worries me.

Does anyone have any experience with the purpose made encrypted thumb drives?

How do you secure your bitcoins? or plan to in the future? Am I just overreacting?

Cheers
AgentofCoin
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September 10, 2015, 02:33:18 AM
 #2

You are not overreacting.
If one day bitcoin becomes a fundamental part of financial society,
you may be holding and controlling a percentage of that new financial order.

Potentially in the far future, even 1 single bitcoin could be enough for a lifetime.
And if that is the case, anyone who holds more than 1 is a target.

No one will rob banks or break into homes for tvs or jewelry.
There will be hacking teams and mafia working together to find early adopters/holders.

But by that point, I like to think we will be living on our BTC Holder Only estates on Mars.  Wink

I can dream...

I support a decentralized & unregulatable ledger first, with safe scaling over time.
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September 10, 2015, 02:33:28 AM
 #3

You should spread out your Bitcoin over several addresses and use encrypted paper wallets and store those paper wallets somewhere very safe (e.g. safe deposit box). They will be encrypted with your password (better make it a good one) so that even if the wallet is stolen, no one can take your funds. The private keys for those addresses should never be on a computer anywhere and the wallets themselves should be made on an offline computer booting from a live cd. Also make multiple copies of each one and store each one in a different place to insure against theft.

coinbeast (OP)
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September 10, 2015, 02:43:03 AM
 #4


There will be hacking teams and mafia working together to find early adopters/holders.



That scares me too. If teams of hackers can breach places like Sony, eBay and Governments various secret facilities like their military's etc. Then who do we think we are to fend them off should they learn that we were early adopters?

I wonder if using a very high resolution image on a computer offline which has been opened in a photo editing program where you cut/paste your wallet in QR as small as it can go since it will only have to in pixels. Or just paste the private key as small as it can get.

AgentofCoin
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September 10, 2015, 03:08:28 AM
 #5

There will be hacking teams and mafia working together to find early adopters/holders.
That scares me too. If teams of hackers can breach places like Sony, eBay and Governments various secret facilities like their military's etc. Then who do we think we are to fend them off should they learn that we were early adopters?

Yes, but they could be doing that now as well.
But when it really gets going in the future we will all probably be dead, so only your descendants will have to worry.  Cheesy

I wonder if using a very high resolution image on a computer offline which has been opened in a photo editing program where you cut/paste your wallet in QR as small as it can go since it will only have to in pixels. Or just paste the private key as small as it can get.

In reality though, you should follow knightdk's advice. It is what I do with my little amount of btc.
What you are describing might be too complicated and if that hard-drive storing the photos fail, you are in trouble.

I support a decentralized & unregulatable ledger first, with safe scaling over time.
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September 10, 2015, 03:15:19 AM
 #6


There will be hacking teams and mafia working together to find early adopters/holders.



That scares me too. If teams of hackers can breach places like Sony, eBay and Governments various secret facilities like their military's etc. Then who do we think we are to fend them off should they learn that we were early adopters?

I wonder if using a very high resolution image on a computer offline which has been opened in a photo editing program where you cut/paste your wallet in QR as small as it can go since it will only have to in pixels. Or just paste the private key as small as it can get.



Soniccoin does this via android app. Would be sweet to incorporate it into Bitcoin. 1 pixel out of the image has the privat key and only yourself or the intended recipient can decode that pixel.

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September 10, 2015, 05:08:16 AM
 #7

I also agree with knight. You need to keep your stash secures on paper not just a thumb drive. One thing I have learned is devices fail. I keepone backed up on thumbs rives AND paper.

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September 10, 2015, 05:37:13 AM
 #8

Paper wallets with a strong passphrase cannot be hacked. Just take everything off any electronic device and transfer it to a paper wallet. Laminate the paper wallet and keep two separate copies in two separate locations.
Store the encrypted passphrase in another location.

I have not heard of anyone who has lost bitcoin <properly created> from paper wallets <offline> I do not trust any electronic or physical device with my money. The industry change to fast, and backward compatibility will not last for 30 or 50 years. < I have stuff on stiffies 1.44mb I cannot access today >

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September 10, 2015, 05:47:42 AM
 #9

Is Ledger not enough protection anymore?
Harry Hood
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September 10, 2015, 06:14:45 AM
 #10

I am a very private bitcoin miner. I don't "believe" bitcoin will be worth a lot of money one day. I feel more that I "know" it will.

I truly believe that one day people will scour the internet forums and anywhere else where they can short list people who have been involved in the bitcoin community for a long time and are likely to be holding a stash of bitcoin.

Cheers


I thought you said you don't believe!

This is a cool thread, consider me a subscriber. I don't have an impressive or unique storage story, so I'll just learn from all of you. The challenge I have with the idea of something elaborate is that the complexity can lead me to forget the details as the years go on. I realize it's my responsibility on my part to not forget, but still...it's easy to drift to the most convenient option.

Perhaps you call could share a gauge on the convenience factor in your respective storage set ups. Thanks.

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September 10, 2015, 06:19:39 AM
 #11

Paper wallets with a strong passphrase cannot be hacked. Just take everything off any electronic device and transfer it to a paper wallet. Laminate the paper wallet and keep two separate copies in two separate locations.
Store the encrypted passphrase in another location.

I have not heard of anyone who has lost bitcoin <properly created> from paper wallets <offline> I do not trust any electronic or physical device with my money. The industry change to fast, and backward compatibility will not last for 30 or 50 years. < I have stuff on stiffies 1.44mb I cannot access today >

And what about the people creating an electrum wallet to find out that there used to be funds in there 2 years before them? That kind of scares me when you don't have an encrypted wallet.dat file...
n2004al
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September 10, 2015, 06:19:51 AM
Last edit: September 17, 2015, 05:37:31 AM by n2004al
 #12


I currently have 2 thumb drives which I consider my "bank" wallet. Which is empty, but still, it's there for when I need to send to it. I have them encrypted in a winrar file, then the wallet itself encrypted with something near impossible to find, then that wallet is then broken up into fragments and embedded into a bunch of wedding photos. Probably overkill, but still, why not... I think I should also make a copy of this to a microsd and a small cd.


I think that your precautions are to weak. Someday someone (even not to much expert) can broke those. And will take the nothing you have on those. How will you survive that day. In which way do you justify yourself for not taking more precautions to protect that big nothing you have? I suggest that you thought deeply about this and reflect as soon as possible. Before the Apocalypse succeed.
Harry Hood
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September 10, 2015, 06:29:36 AM
 #13

This might help your planning: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1175691.0

Just another, very similar thread.

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September 10, 2015, 07:31:20 AM
 #14


There will be hacking teams and mafia working together to find early adopters/holders.



That scares me too. If teams of hackers can breach places like Sony, eBay and Governments various secret facilities like their military's etc. Then who do we think we are to fend them off should they learn that we were early adopters?

I wonder if using a very high resolution image on a computer offline which has been opened in a photo editing program where you cut/paste your wallet in QR as small as it can go since it will only have to in pixels. Or just paste the private key as small as it can get.



many early adopter have acquired their coins, through mining, there is no way to know who they are, also they are storing their treasure in a cold storage, who know where

other early adopter have left the bitcoin game long time ago, i doubt hacker will waste time to search for something unknown, better for them to target big and well knwon place like exchange
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September 10, 2015, 07:35:25 AM
 #15

30 years ago, I worked for a company where they backed up data to huge magnetic tape reels. Those were the days of the dumb terminals and when mainframes was still huge. If you want to restore any of that data

today, you would be in a lot of trouble. The equipment reading the data from those tapes are now obsolete, and possibly recycled into a new notebook or a kids toy.  Huh This is only +/- 30 years ago... The

technology we use today, will be obsolete within the next 20 years. I still have some of those floppy drives luying in a desk somewhere... and nothing to read them with... I think that was only 20 years ago, when

they were used. Let's hope Bitcoin is still around in 30 years, at the rate that companies are creating their own "Private Blockchain" technologies.  Huh Huh  

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September 10, 2015, 07:47:49 AM
 #16

30 years ago, I worked for a company where they backed up data to huge magnetic tape reels. Those were the days of the dumb terminals and when mainframes was still huge. If you want to restore any of that data

today, you would be in a lot of trouble. The equipment reading the data from those tapes are now obsolete, and possibly recycled into a new notebook or a kids toy.  Huh This is only +/- 30 years ago... The

technology we use today, will be obsolete within the next 20 years. I still have some of those floppy drives luying in a desk somewhere... and nothing to read them with... I think that was only 20 years ago, when

they were used. Let's hope Bitcoin is still around in 30 years, at the rate that companies are creating their own "Private Blockchain" technologies.  Huh Huh  

Everything credible and true. But I think that you forget something. Internet has more than 45 years and is yet the most used and developed tool today. Bitcoin is associated with a technology like this. Disruptive for to many technologies and very revolutionary. So I think that the cycle of life for bitcoin and its technology behind it it will not be so short.
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September 10, 2015, 09:16:54 AM
 #17

i currently store my wallet files on 8 different usb drives. at this point they aren't encrypted, but i surely plan to do so. i only don't know what encryption software to use.
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September 10, 2015, 09:36:37 AM
 #18

Use a Trezor and use a secret word option with it. In this way, even if they steal your Trezor or if they find your word seed, from where they can get your coins, they will have nothing.

Two problems still persist with this method. First, they take you hostage and make you give ghem your secret word. But this problem is unsolvable and exist with all methods.

Second problem, you get into car accident and you lose you memory. You are screwed since you forgot your secret word.
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September 10, 2015, 12:00:40 PM
 #19

There are millions of people with plenty of visible wealth who lead perfectly normal lives unencumbered by kidnapping and murder. BTC is obviously more easily extracted but you might be overthinking it.

I wouldn't be trusting any type of fallible storage mediums myself.

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September 10, 2015, 12:26:02 PM
 #20

In my opinion you are overreacting a little bit.
first of all, all the things that you are assuming is going to happen only "if the bitcoin will be worth a lot of money one day (a lot is somewhere around 10K USD per BTC)" which if you ask me, is not going to happen.

second of all, you are saying "People could physically threaten you or your family, attack your house, or perhaps hack you."
the threat is the same amount if you are rich (have a lot of fiat $$$) now. i don't see why there can be any difference between being rich with fiat or being rich by having bitcoin!

i feel like your whole process of securing your bitcoins is a bit extreme with a lot of unnecessary steps, it can be easier but if it makes you feel safe never do even one step less.


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