Breadyfreddy
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October 11, 2019, 09:16:35 AM |
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true but would you rather have somebody find your paper wallet private keys in plain sight or give a challenge to the perp to securely prevent lost bitcoins. Of course I recommend you have another back up in a different location to prevent the central point of failure.
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Breadyfreddy
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October 11, 2019, 09:43:13 AM |
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Im actually redoing the formula, noticed that bitcoin private keys are case sensitive.
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nc50lc
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Self-proclaimed Genius
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October 11, 2019, 09:50:49 AM |
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Im actually redoing the formula, noticed that bitcoin private keys are case sensitive.
Also the " decryption table" below, you're accidentally giving away clues that those characters pointing to invalid characters shouldn't be used. ( read my post above) You get what I mean?
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iparktur
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October 11, 2019, 10:50:10 AM |
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Hey guys, newbie here glad I found this thread. I'm not a programmer or know how to brute force these bitcoin wallets. Iv'e been working on a new way to store your private keys privately and securely out in the open. Essentially if somebody can have access to your private key, They will be unable to unlock the wallet. In this image I put a private key that is missing 13 characters. If you can guess the password, you can have access to decrypting the characters needed to unlock the private key. If anyone can crack this private key, they can have access to some Bitcoin I sent to it. Good luck guys. Freddy. You want, that for 0.00136069 BTC (it is less than $ 12 on a today's rate) someone seriously has engaged in your riddle?
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pooya87
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October 11, 2019, 11:14:53 AM |
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In this image I put a private key that is missing 13 characters. If you can guess the password, you can have access to decrypting the characters needed to unlock the private key.
If anyone can crack this private key, they can have access to some Bitcoin I sent to it.
that's not a private key because as other user pointed out you capitalized all the letters which means you yourself won't be able to recover it without brute forcing! secondly, when you put up a challenge like this there has to be enough incentive for anybody to even bother looking into it. it is a work versus reward thing. 10 bucks reward would only be worth it if only 3 characters were missing true but would you rather have somebody find your paper wallet private keys in plain sight or give a challenge to the perp to securely prevent lost bitcoins. Of course I recommend you have another back up in a different location to prevent the central point of failure.
the "somebody" first has to - come to my home be able to enter it - then go through all my shit and find the keys wherever i have written them - then has to figure out whether it is a key or not since it doesn't look like it - then he has to sit down for a million years trying to break the AES encryption i have used on it
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rosengold
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October 11, 2019, 01:51:14 PM |
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10 bucks reward would only be worth it if only 3 characters were missing For 10 bucks you can power up my computer for 10 minutes c'mon bro put a decent bitcoin on that and we'll start to play, 16 char long to guess a private key it's a good challenge, even with bitcrack and a 2080Ti GPU.
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bounty0z
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October 12, 2019, 11:34:49 AM |
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I don't know more about btc, but about ETH I have an idea if its true . your program take as input the public key and try to generate private key. why not create program that generate private keys randomly, and tried to know if your private key generated is linked to a user wallet ? I think this may be possible than tried to generate private key of unique wallet. If I make any error about understanding please correct me. I am still understanding how blockchain work
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rosengold
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October 12, 2019, 08:40:19 PM |
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I don't know more about btc, but about ETH I have an idea if its true . your program take as input the public key and try to generate private key. why not create program that generate private keys randomly, and tried to know if your private key generated is linked to a user wallet ? I think this may be possible than tried to generate private key of unique wallet. If I make any error about understanding please correct me. I am still understanding how blockchain work
Nope, he's trying to create a security layer for the private key in case of lost, where to access the funds you need to guess the password, very like a type of brainwallet, the problem is: since you reveal parts of your private key, the key isn't too private anymore and it's a matter of time to anyone with knowledge and computer power (Home PC, Google Cloud Engine, whatever) access the funds. I'm totally sure that no one still did that because of tiny ammount of money on wallet, put more money on that and you see how the magic happens
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bellicose
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Sovryn - 300-500% APY on USDT Deposit
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October 12, 2019, 08:45:19 PM |
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Absolutely useless program. No matter how lucky you are, you can never find a single private key with bitcoins in address. This is the same as looking for a grain of sand in the universe. By the way, there is an explanation, but now I can’t find the link to the site.
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rosengold
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October 12, 2019, 08:55:47 PM |
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Absolutely useless program. No matter how lucky you are, you can never find a single private key with bitcoins in address. This is the same as looking for a grain of sand in the universe. By the way, there is an explanation, but now I can’t find the link to the site.
Unless for weak private keys like on 100 BTC Challenge
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almightyruler
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October 13, 2019, 08:17:19 AM |
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Absolutely useless program. No matter how lucky you are, you can never find a single private key with bitcoins in address. This is the same as looking for a grain of sand in the universe. By the way, there is an explanation, but now I can’t find the link to the site.
The first paragraph in the OP states why this program exists (and is useful for that purpose)
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bounty0z
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October 13, 2019, 03:10:20 PM |
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Absolutely useless program. No matter how lucky you are, you can never find a single private key with bitcoins in address. This is the same as looking for a grain of sand in the universe. By the way, there is an explanation, but now I can’t find the link to the site.
Unless for weak private keys like on 100 BTC Challenge Thank you for your information, You have any idea about this tool in linux ? I don't know why I can't "make" always problem in code. Please if you have any similar program that can be run in linux share it with me. Thanks
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pilosopotasyo
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October 14, 2019, 02:50:00 AM |
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Absolutely useless program. No matter how lucky you are, you can never find a single private key with bitcoins in address. This is the same as looking for a grain of sand in the universe. By the way, there is an explanation, but now I can’t find the link to the site.
There will be people trying an impossible task, what if they can, what if they found a method to crack any address, what if they can steal from these addresses, let's just pray no genius finds a way to do this, or everything will be over, all dreams will be shattered.
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BACK FROM A LONG VACATION
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ewaspiro
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October 14, 2019, 11:55:40 AM |
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Absolutely useless program. No matter how lucky you are, you can never find a single private key with bitcoins in address. This is the same as looking for a grain of sand in the universe. By the way, there is an explanation, but now I can’t find the link to the site.
There will be people trying an impossible task, what if they can, what if they found a method to crack any address, what if they can steal from these addresses, let's just pray no genius finds a way to do this, or everything will be over, all dreams will be shattered. tell that to people who won powerball. If there is a possibility, even if its tiny, it will happen if many enough try. You should possibly read Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy 12
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If I dont reply to your PM means I dont want to have you send me more PMs
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DiamondCardz
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October 27, 2019, 12:14:40 PM |
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Absolutely useless program. No matter how lucky you are, you can never find a single private key with bitcoins in address. This is the same as looking for a grain of sand in the universe. By the way, there is an explanation, but now I can’t find the link to the site.
There will be people trying an impossible task, what if they can, what if they found a method to crack any address, what if they can steal from these addresses, let's just pray no genius finds a way to do this, or everything will be over, all dreams will be shattered. tell that to people who won powerball. If there is a possibility, even if its tiny, it will happen if many enough try. You should possibly read Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy 12 Have any of you actually looked into what the puzzle transactions are or are you just trying to post farm? Some collisions have been found for puzzle transaction addresses already. The Large Bitcoin Collider is a project that looks for these collisions and they have been successful multiple times in the past. Part of it is that these puzzle addresses have a fairly predictable pattern to them (I've forgotten what it is), and also that each bitcoin address has around 2 96 private keys that resolve to it. So you don't need to find someone else's private key, just a private key that also resolves to the same address. Native segwit - transactions coming from segwit addresses have smaller size and therefore lower fees.
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BA Computer Science, University of Oxford Dissertation was about threat modelling on distributed ledgers.
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iparktur
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October 27, 2019, 03:47:03 PM |
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Why did I ask? Everywhere it says that BTC addresses begin with 1 and / or 3, but this address is of a completely different structure: it starts with a small letter and if you write this address in the search bar on the "blockchain explorer" site, then there will be no information.
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A-Bolt
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October 27, 2019, 04:37:51 PM |
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Why did I ask? Everywhere it says that BTC addresses begin with 1 and / or 3, but this address is of a completely different structure: it starts with a small letter and if you write this address in the search bar on the "blockchain explorer" site, then there will be no information.
This is Bech32 address format. It's using for native SegWit transactions since 2018. Blockchain.com don't support it. Use other explorers. https://blockchair.com/bitcoin/address/bc1q4unyqwgxhvmxynfj404q903zrfwywygc9rmm8s
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iparktur
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October 27, 2019, 05:41:09 PM |
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Why did I ask? Everywhere it says that BTC addresses begin with 1 and / or 3, but this address is of a completely different structure: it starts with a small letter and if you write this address in the search bar on the "blockchain explorer" site, then there will be no information.
This is Bech32 address format. It's using for native SegWit transactions since 2018. Blockchain.com don't support it. Use other explorers. https://blockchair.com/bitcoin/address/bc1q4unyqwgxhvmxynfj404q903zrfwywygc9rmm8sYes, I especially do not need it! I just accidentally saw this address and wondered - what kind of "beast" is this ?! Thanks for the information.
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