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Author Topic: Protecting my offline wallets from physical theft  (Read 2208 times)
7Priest7
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December 10, 2013, 10:17:19 PM
 #21

Harddrive faillure odds are bigger than theft. So backup your wallet on 2 USB sticks to be sure.
Just plain untrue, if we look at burglaries for 2011.
http://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/hb9411.pdf
If we look purely at portable electronics stolen that year 978,700.
There is about 2 personal electronics stolen each minute(This is in the U.S. only).

Even if we sampled every person with a post 2000 hdd (including all countries).
We would get nowhere near 2 hdd crashes per minute.


Backing up on USB Sticks is still wise.
Backing up in general is wise.
If you are incredibly sure of your encryption you could do a usenet backup.
Whoever mines the block which ends up containing your transaction will get its fee.
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Coma
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December 10, 2013, 10:55:47 PM
 #22

I'd recommend encrypted DVD

Do you mean encrypting the dvd completely or a simple openssl aes file encription would be ok?
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December 10, 2013, 11:15:10 PM
 #23

Use a Millenium DVD

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December 11, 2013, 01:26:15 AM
 #24

What is true:

1. Hard drives fail.
2. USB flash memory fail.
3. Anything physical gets stolen.
4. Anything physical decays, rots, or deteriorates.
5. Human error (yourself, or others) can destroy your media.

Eventually.

Backup backup backup. Different media. Different locations.

Encrypt so no one else can read it.

Backup so you can find it in case you lose the first one.

bitcoinrocks (OP)
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December 11, 2013, 02:39:49 PM
 #25

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If you ever restore the wallet to spend BTC, make sure to update all the cold backups so that you capture all the change addresses.

Quote
This worries me.  So if I back up my private key and continue to use my wallet, the backed-up private key does not back up my entire balance at some point?

Quote
Depends on your client. If you re using electrum or armory, you re ok.

To confirm, I'm not OK if I'm using multibit?  That's enough to get me to switch away from multibit.

What about the QT clients for the altcoins?  Do they have this deficiency?
davedx
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December 11, 2013, 02:57:20 PM
 #26

I encrypted mine with the client, then encrypted the wallet.dat and emailed it to myself.

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December 11, 2013, 10:25:14 PM
 #27

You should also save a paper backup, unencrypted, with information explaining what it is, in a safe deposit box so that your heirs can have your bitcoin when you die.
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