sebamatusr
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November 19, 2012, 08:46:55 PM |
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Best way you be to just memorise if you can I assume you're talking about the passphrase, well that's not entirely adecuate, because id something were to happen to you, nobody is going to be able to take the money from your account, so you can write it down and put it in a safebox, where your family can access it and in case of any sudden death, they will be able to use the money.
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bizwoo
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November 20, 2012, 07:44:55 PM |
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Thank you for all the excellent information in this thread. This is useful information for new people interested in bitcoin as me.
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fido
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November 20, 2012, 08:39:33 PM |
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Brainwallets are a great idea; just don't forget the phrase if you are storing a lot of money!
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xaidin
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November 20, 2012, 09:54:02 PM |
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Cool
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IRCCo Jeff
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November 21, 2012, 04:02:50 AM |
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I would agree that the best practice is to keep your wallet on media not connected to the internet for routine storage (and have backups)
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anaalius
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November 21, 2012, 11:16:46 AM |
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I am hoping Bitcoin QT clients encryption is safe enough for the time being while I only have minimal bitcoins but it looks like ill have to look into wallet security a lot more.
Im guessing there would be a way to have my wallet stored on a usb stick for saftey
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hashkey
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November 21, 2012, 06:38:13 PM |
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I am hoping Bitcoin QT clients encryption is safe enough for the time being while I only have minimal bitcoins but it looks like ill have to look into wallet security a lot more.
Im guessing there would be a way to have my wallet stored on a usb stick for saftey
There is a way. And it's already been discussed on the thread's OP.
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RuckingFetard
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November 22, 2012, 01:11:50 AM |
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There's no 100% secure wallet just as there exists no 100% effective contraceptive
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Chris Weber
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November 22, 2012, 07:35:50 AM |
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First you have to set measure what is secure for you. e.g.: -you want noone to know you holding Bitcoin -you wand noone to see your transaction -you are confident noone knowing that a transaction is connected to you -you just want to be the only one to spend your coin
if you wanna have all of that, it is hard - but still possible or at least plausible deniable with Bitcoin. But never forget, that it was never intended to be "not known" anyhow - it was just meant to be pseudonymous and free of central control.
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aware
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November 22, 2012, 05:55:40 PM |
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Put in safety box is the most secure lol.
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zxyzxy
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November 22, 2012, 11:30:52 PM |
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Is it safe to backup my wallet on dropbox? HELL NO! Well unless you encrypted it with a strong password. But Dropbox (i.e. their employees) can access your data. And depending on where they host their data, so can the particular 3rd party hosting / cloud storage company (maybe Amazon or whatever). Not saying these companies are untrustworthy, but you simply don't want to take this risk. Especially because IF your coins disappear, there's no way to proof it was them. Wuala.com (an alternative to Dropbox) is safer because encryption occurs client side there. Then again, you shouldn't have an unencrypted wallet on your PC anyway. Suppose someone breaks in and takes your PC. Or you lose your laptop or whatever. Simply do NOT mess around with your money. you think someone from their site has the time or motivation to g through tones of uploaded data? compress it as randomfilename.rar that is pw protected and there you go
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prezbo
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November 22, 2012, 11:32:16 PM |
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Is it safe to backup my wallet on dropbox? HELL NO! Well unless you encrypted it with a strong password. But Dropbox (i.e. their employees) can access your data. And depending on where they host their data, so can the particular 3rd party hosting / cloud storage company (maybe Amazon or whatever). Not saying these companies are untrustworthy, but you simply don't want to take this risk. Especially because IF your coins disappear, there's no way to proof it was them. Wuala.com (an alternative to Dropbox) is safer because encryption occurs client side there. Then again, you shouldn't have an unencrypted wallet on your PC anyway. Suppose someone breaks in and takes your PC. Or you lose your laptop or whatever. Simply do NOT mess around with your money. you think someone from their site has the time or motivation to g through tones of uploaded data? Not too difficult if you know the file is most likely named "wallet.dat".
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zxyzxy
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November 22, 2012, 11:32:54 PM |
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i edited my post above right after typing
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ZeoNet
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November 23, 2012, 03:48:05 AM |
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Guys, I cannot stress this enough. If you're going to use a Live CD or USB, ad majorem dei gloriam, PLEASE use TAILS. Tor is just about the best thing that happened to BitCoin in terms of security during transactions.
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Dagger75
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November 24, 2012, 04:07:16 AM |
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Thanks for the informative post OP. I appreciate your effort
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sandaniele
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November 25, 2012, 11:55:48 AM |
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being kinda new on this whole bitcoin thing the wallet security was one of my big concerns (and yes, I tend to be a little paranoid).
having an OS on an usb device is actually a great solution. All I came up with was actually buying a simple computer and never ever accessing internet on that. thanx for showing me a waaaay simpler method
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colindean
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November 26, 2012, 04:51:50 AM |
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I read a lot of suggestions about an offline wallet. If I have a computer that is completely and entirely disconnected from the Internet -- it never connects to a network under any circumstances -- how can I get a transaction it generates onto the network?
I can obviously move the blockchain files between computers, but how will the online client react if it sees data in the files that wasn't there previously? Will it identify "unsent transactions" or something like that and forward them to the network?
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prezbo
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November 26, 2012, 10:13:03 AM |
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I read a lot of suggestions about an offline wallet. If I have a computer that is completely and entirely disconnected from the Internet -- it never connects to a network under any circumstances -- how can I get a transaction it generates onto the network?
You can use armory or brainwallet to sign the transaction offline, and broadcast it using brainwallet.
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buttersstotch
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November 26, 2012, 02:21:59 PM |
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Nice info thanks.
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MATTTT
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November 26, 2012, 06:56:04 PM |
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Ok, here comes this newbie's first post....
A couple issues:
1)Typo: "walled.dat".
2)There's no protection against MITM attack when you download that LiveCD - people need to ensure that the LiveCD image they download hasn't been trojaned on its way to them. Checking securely obtained SHA hashes, PGP/GPG keys ... very important and worth mentioning! Ditto for the bitcoin client. OP says: "I think it makes sense to trust both the Ubuntu LiveCD as well as the client from bitcoin.org for now." Well, it makes sense if you ensure they are what you think they are -- you have to trust someone.
-=>MATTTT>--
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