I'm sure some of you have already seen this story on X, Reddit, or Telegram, but I haven't seen a dedicated discussion thread here on Bitcointalk.
Back in 2013, a user created a Bitcoin Core (Bitcoin-Qt v0.7.2) wallet and chose to encrypt it with a passphrase. Years later, after accumulating BTC over time, he discovered that he had completely forgotten the passphrase.
Today, that wallet contains approximately
16.5 BTC.
Wallet address:189JveWz2WP79oYU9Gq4NUfiurbiuNPUhnInterestingly people managed to identify the wallet owner and discovered that he was actually a Bitcointalk member from the early days:
arielramI couldn't find any posts from the account, but the profile appears to belong to the same person who is currently trying to recover the wallet.
Now the owner is actively trying to recover access and has publicly shared numerous clues, personal details, password habits, and someone helping him have even created a web-based offline verifier so that anyone can help test password guesses.
According to posts circulating online, the owner has offered a
0.5 BTC reward to whoever helps discover the correct passphrase.
Background:The wallet was created using Bitcoin-Qt v0.7.2 around 2013.
The owner remembers:
- Password length likely between 7 and 15 characters
- Usually used uppercase letters
- Often used numbers such as 5, 6, 7 and 8
- Rarely used symbols or special characters
- Sometimes used Spanish words
- Sometimes used English words
- Usually capitalized words
- Occasionally replaced z → s and s → z
Possible words he remembers using:
pera
durazno
durasno
luz
lus
asadera
asaderas
colimba
wallet
billetera
Personal details that may or may not be relevant:
Guillermo Ariel Ramirez
Born: November 21, 1969
guillermo
ariel
ramirez
1969
21
noviembre
november
Try Your Own GuessesThere's an offline verifier that allows anyone to test password candidates safely.
Offline Wallet Password VerifierYou can also download it and run it locally if you prefer.
The verifier only checks whether a password decrypts the wallet. It does not require access to any coins and does not expose private keys.
Public ReferencesX / Twitter:
https://x.com/marcebit/status/2066185663582482539https://x.com/marcebit/status/2063643404240646522Many people have already tried:
- Dictionary attacks
- Leaked password collections
- Old forum credentials
- Adobe breach passwords
- Trello passwords
- Bitcointalk passwords
- Hundreds of thousands of generated candidates
Personally I've already tested around
500,000 password guesses without success.
Maybe someone here notices a pattern everyone else has missed.
Reward:According to public posts, the owner is offering
0.5 BTC to the person who helps recover the correct passphrase.
So if you enjoy password forensics, old-school Bitcoin mysteries, or simply want to take a shot at solving a million-dollar puzzle, this might be one of the most interesting wallet recovery cases currently being discussed.
Good luck, detectives.
Below are the actual posts and references:
Reward of 0.5 BTC (~31k USD) for whoever discovers the password
In 2013 someone created a wallet with Bitcoin Core and encrypted it without giving it much thought.
Throughout the year, they deposited small amounts, and when they wanted to cash out, they didn't remember in the slightest that they had even encrypted it...
In an attempt to recover it at that time, they filled out the following form: (see image)
The version of Bitcoin Core from that era said the following when encrypting the wallet: Use a password of ten or more random characters, or eight or more words.. This was just a suggestion; the real requirement was that it have more than one character.
Nowadays, the person believes the password might contain the word "wallet" or "billetera"
Offline page for manual testing:
https://mrbianchi.github.io/decrypter16btc-web/ Hashcat hash for those who want to use brute force: $bitcoin$96$1bbd24dc0f23175483d619a24e15f4a06e7e1d3d8b13d9a979b7f4223792836f50520c27c698fa9468ff95f481b888f0$16$65e1017f33467568$63533$2$00$2$00
In 2018 I made a similar post in the Bitcoin Argentina Facebook group
https://facebook.com/groups/351870631591732/?multi_permalinks=1569987566446693For those who don't know me, in this group I have carried out numerous jobs related to wallet recovery and balances
Some additional info posted on telegram
# Ariel - Consolidated Additional Information
## Personal Background
- From Argentina.
- Native language: Spanish.
- Very basic English.
- Tech enthusiast since childhood.
- Studied Systems Engineering.
- Worked for a chemical company.
- No interest in politics.
- Was involved in scouting groups.
- Does not enjoy video games.
- Favorite music: 80s rock.
## Dates
- Legal DOB (commonly used): 21 Dec 1969.
- Actual DOB: 21 Nov 1969.
- Frequently used the legal birth date.
## Bitcoin Background
- Learned about Bitcoin through Google+ groups.
- Bought BTC from a Google+ contact.
- Created the wallet following a Google+ guide.
- Knew other wallets existed but only created one wallet himself.
- First five incoming transactions came from a faucet called something like "50bit".
- Wallet appears to have been created with Bitcoin-Qt 0.7.2.
- At the time he was experimenting and learning about Bitcoin wallets.
## Password Information
### What he remembers
- Does NOT remember any exact password.
- Only password-related clues are those listed in the Excel sheet.
- Different periods of his life used different passwords.
- Passwords were often inspired by things around him or by topics that were important at the time.
### Habits
- The wallet password was also used for other services during that period.
- Did not use a password manager.
- A previous statement about copying the password from an old dial-up ISP was a typo and should be ignored.
- He cannot rule out password reuse but does not specifically remember it.
## Possible Password Inspiration
### Physical surroundings when creating the wallet
- Bedroom.
- Bed.
- Nightstand.
- Notebook/laptop.
- Possibly a drinking glass.
### Speculative words (NOT actual memories)
- billetera
- monedero
- bitcoin
- santa
- rosa
- mi
- wallet
## Family Situation (around 2013)
- No wife.
- No children.
- No pets.
## Sports Teams
- River Plate.
- Godoy Cruz.
- Gutiérrez Sport Club.
## Known Email Addresses
- arielram69@hotmail.com
- ariel.ram@gmail.com
- arielram@gmail.com
## Additional Notes
- More than 10 years have passed, so he remembers very little from that period.
- Learned Bitcoin through online guides and Google+ communities.
- He believes there were periods where he consistently used one password and later switched to another, often based on his surroundings or current interests.
- While creating the wallet, he was testing multiple wallet options and exploring the ecosystem.
X Post:
https://x.com/marcebit/status/2063643404240646522Reddit post:
https://www.reddit.com/r/Bitcoin/comments/1u53hci/05_btc_reward_usd_31000_for_recovering_the/