tclo (OP)
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August 18, 2013, 12:23:49 AM Last edit: August 18, 2013, 12:34:24 AM by tclo |
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People talk about paper wallets a lot and "cold storage" but it seems like it would be safer to have an encrypted electronic wallet, copied to multiple flash/drives computers. I'm talking about professional grade encryption like PGP or truecrypt.
But it seems like a paper wallet could be seized just about as easily as your fiat in a bank account. Unless you hide the paper wallet somewhere like burying it in the wilderness, but you could do the same with fiat cash and that is a lot more stable of a currency than BTC.
I guess you could hide the paper wallet private key separately from the BTC address....maybe that would work but seems like putting the encrypted wallet on a few flash drives and hiding them would be better. Then even if someone found it (which would not happen if you hid it well enough), then they couldn't even use it, not matter what.
Well please tell me if I'm missing something here...thanks.
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TippingPoint
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August 18, 2013, 01:14:45 AM Last edit: August 18, 2013, 01:42:07 AM by TippingPoint |
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Paper documents have lasted at least for centuries https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Missal_of_Silos , if protected from fire and water. Modern papers are even more resistant to decomposition than they used to be. A paper wallet does not necessarily need to have the words "Bitcoin Wallet" printed on it. For example, I could download a large text file, insert some Bitcoin info into it (perhaps on the ISBN page) and print it. In a binder, on a shelf, it would not attract attention. There are many other possibilities. Printed QR codes https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QR_code can also be obfuscated so that they are not readily associated with Bitcoins, but would still be scan-able. Flash drives are said to have a much shorter lifespan, and an inquisitive person (Investigator) could reasonably conclude that files on it are important, and potentially valuable. It could easily attract attention. Flash drives can become infected or corrupted. Disclaimer: I back up wallet data to flash drives.
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tclo (OP)
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August 18, 2013, 03:04:18 AM |
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yes but if it is on a shelf, then it could burn up in a fire. And still could be seized easily. I guess if you want to go that route, you should multiple backups and you have to come up with your own personal encryption method.
But that's why I say flash drive is better. Yes it may not last for hundreds of years, but it doesn't need to...probably a lifetime at most and most likely a lot less than that. If you have it encrypted, you could put it on multiple ones for low cost...or just a cheap 1GB microsd card. you can probably order 10 of those on ebay for $10 or so..if not less.
Well I'm just thinking outloud but the paper wallet thing just doesn't seem great to me after giving it more thought. The downside with the encrypted wallet is that you have to remember the password and in case of brain damage or death, you won't have it. So you still have to hide that somehow.
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TippingPoint
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August 18, 2013, 03:14:05 AM |
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Paper appears to be one of the reasonable options.
Backing up your wallet is the key point.
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01BTC10
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August 18, 2013, 03:20:18 AM |
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I guess you could hide the paper wallet private key separately from the BTC address.... Only the private key is needed to spend the bitcoin! The address is used to deposit and verify the balance. 2 of 3 paper wallet will add even more security when developed: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=139625.0Paper is the safest option imo.
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TippingPoint
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August 18, 2013, 03:36:33 AM |
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tclo (OP)
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August 18, 2013, 08:04:03 AM |
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Only the private key is needed to spend the bitcoin! The address is used to deposit and verify the balance.
Ok thank you for the clarification there. You can see I'm still learning with much of this, and that's a rookie mistake.
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BombaUcigasa
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August 18, 2013, 10:03:28 AM |
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Both can get: - stolen - broken - lost - misplaced - burnt - copied
Paper wallet can get: - wiped out due to crappy ink or light (laminate or fold them) - decoded directly by an adversary
Flash drive can get: - hardware obsolete or incompatible (5.25 or even 3.5 floppies anyone?)(remember spindle magnetic platter hard drives anyone?!) - software obsolete or incompatible (think future bitcoin clients) - impossible to open due to password forgotten (happens very often) - wiped out due to software/hardware/time
Why would you store a sensitive piece of information on a very complex, untested and fragile technological device, when a simpler and more reliable method exists?
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glitch003
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August 18, 2013, 11:17:20 AM |
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Piper can print encrypted paper wallets that you can also back up onto a flash drive. So you can have the best of both worlds!
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VolanicEruptor
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August 18, 2013, 11:26:21 AM |
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You can further reinforce a paper wallet by protecting it with other materials (such as those that are fire rated). I love the barcode idea with ISBN.. you could hide that on an empty cerial box and nobody would ever know what it is, or on a product nobody wants to touch.. like a can of jock itch cream
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Mike Christ
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August 18, 2013, 12:04:43 PM Last edit: August 18, 2013, 12:23:03 PM by Mike Christ |
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you could hide that on an empty cerial box and nobody would ever know what it is
That may work, but I'd always be afraid someone would find the box and think it was trash and consequently throw it away
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/dev/null
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August 18, 2013, 12:21:03 PM |
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Encrypt private key with some random encryption algorithms/ciphers and get it tattooed on your body somewhere. Your private key will stay with you forever. However if you are some criminal etc, police will find it,but you can still try to use your mind and hide it properly. http://crypo.in.ua/http://www.crypo.com/http://www.crypo.net/
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VolanicEruptor
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August 18, 2013, 01:49:11 PM |
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you could hide that on an empty cerial box and nobody would ever know what it is
That may work, but I'd always be afraid someone would find the box and think it was trash and consequently throw it away and thats exactly why i went on to my second point, putting it on something that nobody else would want to touch...like your vaseline, jock itch cream, or your mom
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TippingPoint
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August 19, 2013, 01:09:53 AM |
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This is an example of a private key, written in hexadecimal E9 87 3D 79 C6 D8 7D C0 FB 6A 57 78 63 33 89 F4 45 32 13 30 3D A6 1F 20 BD 67 FC 23 3A A3 32 62
And here is the same private key, written in Base 58 Wallet Import format 5Kb8kLf9zgWQnogidDA76MzPL6TsZZY36hWXMssSzNydYXYB9KF
Either could be punctuated in various ways to make the purpose less obvious
E9 87 3D 79 C6 D8 7D C0 FB 6A 57 78 63 33 89 F4 45 32 13 30 3D A6 1F 20 BD 67 FC 23 3A A3 32 62
5Kb8kL f9z gWQnogid DA76 MzPL6T sZZY 36h WXMss SzNyd YXYB9KF
These, printed on paper on a page of uninteresting text, might be more secure than an ornate banknote type design, that contains a scannable QR code and the word "Bitcoin".
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01BTC10
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August 19, 2013, 01:17:35 AM |
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Good idea, could even write it like this:
site1.com: 5Kb8kL site2.com: f9zgWQnogid site3.com: DA76MzPL6T site4.com: sZZY36h site5.com: WXMssSzNyd site6.com: YXYB9KF
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mises
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August 19, 2013, 01:28:09 AM |
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Piper can print encrypted paper wallets that you can also back up onto a flash drive. So you can have the best of both worlds! Hahaha
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tclo (OP)
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August 19, 2013, 05:11:53 AM |
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This is an example of a private key, written in hexadecimal E9 87 3D 79 C6 D8 7D C0 FB 6A 57 78 63 33 89 F4 45 32 13 30 3D A6 1F 20 BD 67 FC 23 3A A3 32 62
And here is the same private key, written in Base 58 Wallet Import format 5Kb8kLf9zgWQnogidDA76MzPL6TsZZY36hWXMssSzNydYXYB9KF
Either could be punctuated in various ways to make the purpose less obvious
E9 87 3D 79 C6 D8 7D C0 FB 6A 57 78 63 33 89 F4 45 32 13 30 3D A6 1F 20 BD 67 FC 23 3A A3 32 62
5Kb8kL f9z gWQnogid DA76 MzPL6T sZZY 36h WXMss SzNyd YXYB9KF
These, printed on paper on a page of uninteresting text, might be more secure than an ornate banknote type design, that contains a scannable QR code and the word "Bitcoin".
any kind of traditional conversation to another format seems weak because anyone could figure that out. Once bitcoin becomes more popular, you are screwed there. Or if they physically seize the paper wallet, then you won't have it either. It seems like encrypting to some microsd cards as well as uploading to the cloud in various places would be good. Although of course if the NSA sees any encrypted files in your cloud storage, they will probably just assume you are a terrorist and summarily execute you...because that's how they roll.
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domob
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August 19, 2013, 06:32:44 AM |
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Piper can print encrypted paper wallets that you can also back up onto a flash drive. So you can have the best of both worlds! I don't know about Piper, but personally I've also done both. The private key on my paper wallet is still encrypted, though, to be safe against someone stealing the paper (although it is in a safety deposit box), and the electronic copies (in two locations) are encrypted with multiple layers (wallet encryption from bitcoind, PGP encryption to a symmetric key / passphrase and LUKS for the storage medium). I hope my coins are secure that way, and honestly the most worries I have are that I somehow screwed up saving the key or some decryption doesn't work or so, more than someone getting the private key and stealing my coins. (But I tried hard to be sure everything is fine.)
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Use your Namecoin identity as OpenID: https://nameid.org/Donations: 1 domobKsPZ5cWk2kXssD8p8ES1qffGUCm | NMC: NC domobcmcmVdxC5yxMitojQ4tvAtv99pY BM-GtQnWM3vcdorfqpKXsmfHQ4rVYPG5pKS | GPG 0xA7330737
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deepceleron
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August 19, 2013, 09:24:32 AM |
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You can have many paper wallet copies of your private key that can't be stolen from you
ciphertext:
50 shades of gray, hardcover, first edition
Brainwallet = decoding method
start at N pages from front of book start up M from bottom of page start in O characters from start of line retrieve P characters from each page skip forward in Q page steps until you have characters from R pages total
SHA256 hash the retrieved characters S times = private key
Replace the Ns with numbers significant to you; even if all the numbers are all "2", just the method obfuscates it beyond retrieval. Something I have (but many have) + something I know.
Nash would enjoy finding the bitcoins sent to spies encoded in the New York Times.
I do not use this method, but if I had a completely different method I actually use, I wouldn't tell you.
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