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Author Topic: Lost password to wallet.dat | 11.7 BTC | Willing to sell cheap offer  (Read 3370 times)
CrazyJumpingLadders (OP)
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April 23, 2014, 05:13:49 PM
Last edit: April 23, 2014, 06:18:51 PM by CrazyJumpingLadders
 #1

Hi All,

My cousin has a small situation, he uses keypass to keep his passwords nice a safe (and so he remembers them) as he uses strong passwords Capitals, lowercase and numbers. No extra punctuation.

Today his keypass wallet got corrupted and he didnt have a backup so now he has lost 11.7 BTC, unless someone can crack it.

He knows its none of his usual passwords as its a secure one generated on http://strongpasswordgenerator.com/ and could be up to 15 character long.

Now, he has told me he is either willing to get someone to crack it for him and give him some of the btc (25%) or sell the wallet for a fee just so he at least gets some of his money back.

Just wondering if anyone else has any suggestions? are there any crackers out there that can brute force it or reverse engineer it?

he only lost the password 15 minutes ago.

Thanks for any help

https://blockchain.info/address/15Simt9rXvCLgfG7c3KcGWsWYrZfhGv6t1
trout
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April 23, 2014, 05:24:21 PM
 #2

you have to try and restore your corrupted keypass files. May be offer a reward for fixing those, without giving away wallet.dat - someone may give it a try. Working on wallet.dat directly is pretty much hopeless in this situation.
Yuki1988
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April 23, 2014, 06:07:08 PM
 #3

He knows its none of his usual passwords as its a secure one generated on http://strongpasswordgenerator.com/ and could be up to 15 character long.

Can he remember past of the password, or he has completely no idea what the password is?
If it is the latter case, I don't think it can be brute forced for a 15-character long password...


CrazyJumpingLadders (OP)
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April 23, 2014, 06:17:46 PM
 #4

He knows its none of his usual passwords as its a secure one generated on http://strongpasswordgenerator.com/ and could be up to 15 character long.

Can he remember past of the password, or he has completely no idea what the password is?
If it is the latter case, I don't think it can be brute forced for a 15-character long password...



He thinks it starts with X0

Yuki1988
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April 23, 2014, 06:42:56 PM
 #5

He knows its none of his usual passwords as its a secure one generated on http://strongpasswordgenerator.com/ and could be up to 15 character long.

Can he remember past of the password, or he has completely no idea what the password is?
If it is the latter case, I don't think it can be brute forced for a 15-character long password...



He thinks it starts with X0

FYR: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=85495.msg4401257#msg4401257

If we are talking about 13 unknown characters in the password, your only bet is to restore the keypass files.

CrazyJumpingLadders (OP)
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April 23, 2014, 07:02:06 PM
 #6

He knows its none of his usual passwords as its a secure one generated on http://strongpasswordgenerator.com/ and could be up to 15 character long.

Can he remember past of the password, or he has completely no idea what the password is?
If it is the latter case, I don't think it can be brute forced for a 15-character long password...



He thinks it starts with X0

FYR: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=85495.msg4401257#msg4401257

If we are talking about 13 unknown characters in the password, your only bet is to restore the keypass files.

Thanks for the link.

He believes it is more like 8 - 10 characters long. he said it wasn't very big.
Yuki1988
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April 23, 2014, 07:40:29 PM
 #7

He knows its none of his usual passwords as its a secure one generated on http://strongpasswordgenerator.com/ and could be up to 15 character long.

Can he remember past of the password, or he has completely no idea what the password is?
If it is the latter case, I don't think it can be brute forced for a 15-character long password...



He thinks it starts with X0

FYR: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=85495.msg4401257#msg4401257

If we are talking about 13 unknown characters in the password, your only bet is to restore the keypass files.

Thanks for the link.

He believes it is more like 8 - 10 characters long. he said it wasn't very big.

If it is 6-8 unknown characters (with 2 known), it is possible to brute force the password.
Good luck Smiley

Tarjeik
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April 23, 2014, 07:43:41 PM
 #8

Did he delete the files where his passwords were stored or was the file just corrupted for no reason?

If it was deleted there are tons of ways to recover files using a file recovery program.

Happend to me once and that's what I did.
mechew
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April 23, 2014, 08:01:21 PM
 #9

Can I just ask who would buy this?

It sounds like the perfect scam.  Buy an encrypted wallet and try to crack it, after a while, who's to stop the seller from remembering it and just transferring it to another wallet to sell.
Yuki1988
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April 23, 2014, 08:07:01 PM
 #10

Can I just ask who would buy this?

It sounds like the perfect scam.  Buy an encrypted wallet and try to crack it, after a while, who's to stop the seller from remembering it and just transferring it to another wallet to sell.

I don't know if it is a scam or not. I was just replying to help OP understanding the difficulty of brute forcing the password.
IMO, no one should and would buy a encrypted wallet.dat, but it is possible that OP send the file to a trusted person with ability to brute force it, and split the bitcoin inside afterwards.

cp1
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April 23, 2014, 08:24:05 PM
 #11

It looks like that address has more activity than a lost one would have.

Guide to armory offline install on USB key:  https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=241730.0
Nobitcoin
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April 24, 2014, 04:21:03 AM
 #12

Wait a minute let me get my quantum server out the cupboard and cracked it for you in say 1 year
poordeveloper
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April 24, 2014, 09:15:04 AM
 #13

Has your friend tried to use Recuva to recover the file with the passwords? It's possible it's still recoverable.

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April 24, 2014, 02:39:19 PM
 #14

Just post the private key and someone will eventually crack it.   Wink
Peter882
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April 25, 2014, 01:51:18 PM
 #15

Just post the private key and someone will eventually crack it.   Wink

Private key? Looks like it is a typo here. Smiley

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May 03, 2014, 11:41:07 AM
 #16

I give you 0.001?
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May 03, 2014, 11:45:05 AM
 #17

I give you 0.001?

After this post the given address was still being used: https://blockchain.info/address/15Simt9rXvCLgfG7c3KcGWsWYrZfhGv6t1

So most likely a scam attempt ? Or he got his wallet/passwords fixed.

Anyway, no need to make offers Wink

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May 07, 2014, 11:03:40 PM
 #18

I would buy it if I knew that the wallet truly contained 11.7 BTC. Or just wait for quantum computers to extreme brute force it open  Grin Grin














 

 

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Littleshop
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May 08, 2014, 03:17:52 AM
 #19

I would buy it if I knew that the wallet truly contained 11.7 BTC. Or just wait for quantum computers to extreme brute force it open  Grin Grin

Bad idea.

I could make a wallet with 11.7 BTC in it with a good 30 character password and sell it to you.  You would never crack it.  Two years later I could then just move it. 

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May 09, 2014, 01:38:36 PM
 #20

Imagine you spend all that time Decrypting it and the Wallet file is empty? lol.
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