piotr_n (OP)
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aka tonikt
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April 19, 2012, 09:47:35 PM |
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There are probably hundreds of people out there who can look and browse through the actual users data. Employers, window cleaners, hackers, gov agencies - each of them doing a lazy job, dreaming about doing a profitable private project... Of course they are going to look into all the wallet.dat files - the first, the better.
Privacy: Dropbox employees are prohibited from viewing the content of files you store in your Dropbox account, and are only permitted to view file metadata (e.g., file names and locations). However, they may have a small number of employees who must be able to access user data. Dropbox has strict policy and technical access controls that prohibit employee access except in these rare circumstances. In addition, they employ a number of physical and electronic security measures to protect user information from unauthorized access. You should also note that Dropbox will cooperate with law enforcement if needed and will release your data in unencrypted form in these cases. - http://www.kimpl.com/1297/secure-online-backup-file-sync-serviceDiscussed here as well: - http://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=1679.msg29488#msg29488 - https://www.dropbox.com/help/27Incidentally, that Kimpl review stated that Spider Oak was more secure than Wuala (2nd place), Dropbox, and SugarSync. - http://www.spideroak.com But that also says "for even better security you should encrypt" using TrueCrypt. all true though the quote that "employees are prohibited from viewing the content of files" may be a bit misleading. being prohibited doesn't actually stop people from doing the prohibited things. at least there hasn't been a reliably proven correlation
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Check out gocoin - my original project of full bitcoin node & cold wallet written in Go.PGP fingerprint: AB9E A551 E262 A87A 13BB 9059 1BE7 B545 CDF3 FD0E
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etotheipi
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Activity: 1428
Merit: 1093
Core Armory Developer
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April 20, 2012, 04:23:52 AM |
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Not to discourage finding good file-encryption solutions, but this is exactly why I made deterministic wallets with paper backups in Armory. - Print off a couple copies of your wallet
- Put one in a safety-deposit box
- Hide another in a book on your bookshelf
- Never make another backup again! (unless you import addresses)
- Never let your wallet touch anyone else's computer except your own!
I would never scatter my wallet all over the interwebs, encrypted or not. And now you don't have to. And if you're really paranoid, use Armory's cold-storage, too. (P.S -- I was the one that found that 0.4.0 bug and was part of the justification for my wallet file format ). P.S. - Electrum uses deterministic wallets, too, and the Satoshi client will have them implemented in 0.7.0+. In case anyone is interested: I started an announcement thread reserved only for major releases. It no longer requires so much RAM, and tons of new features since crowdfunding. </spam>
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localhost
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April 20, 2012, 01:20:50 PM |
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Wuala is a major pain in the ass to use. I wanted to like it, but it's a) Java based, so it's a piece of shit from the start, b) A resource hog, C) kind of flakey, D) Slow as dirt. Definitely agreed for a), but otherwise I find it rather convenient to use. And, notably (and surprisingly) not slow on my below average computer.
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EhVedadoOAnonimato
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April 20, 2012, 01:58:27 PM |
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Those who mentioned Wuala forgot an important advantage of this service: they accept bitcoin. Plus, I don't find it a pain in the ass as somebody said above. I always have a working java VM anyway. I don't find it particularly slow either. But, just in case, I manually encrypt my wallet before sending it to Wuala... AFAIK, the code that does the encryption in the client side is closed, so it has not been publicly inspected.
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deepceleron
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April 20, 2012, 02:22:15 PM |
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Something to do for fun and luls - add the private key to the mtgox "redeem private key" feature. This is likely what was done to all the unencrypted keys discovered in the wallet by a thief. This might give some kind of error if the address is already being scraped, indicating to you mtgox knows who the hacker is, or if mtgox doesn't check and notify upon duplicates, you may or may not beat the other person that is "redeeming" depending on how mtgox processes their list of private keys. Improperly implemented, MtGox could send two transactions for the same coins, and you might see what looks like a double-spend from two auto-empties when coins are sent to the address. (edit: looks like the scam scum re-sent the coins in the same block, so he is faster than gox).
If you have a pre-encryption copy of the wallet.dat, the private key for an address can easily be obtained with pywallet in hex form. Get the earliest copy you have uploaded, and use a hex editor to search for the bitcoin address. Look for 6B 65 79 41 04, "KeyA" + 0x04, somewhere before that. The KeyA is an indicator of a leaked unencrypted private key; the 0x04 is the first digit of a 66 digit hex private key. If it is in the uploaded file, that's probably what happened.
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deepceleron
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April 20, 2012, 02:45:17 PM |
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I wonder if blockchain.info logs transactions in addition to new blocks? With their currently 2841 connected nodes, the first-seen peer broadcasting the tx could easily be the IP address of the thief if he accept inbounds or doesn't discriminate who he connects to. We could contact Ben to see if he does, and send several payments to the address to see if it will reveal it's auto-scraping IP. If not, that's something for the Bitcoin Police to set up - a privacy-busting every-node connecting transaction logging bit monster.
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doobadoo
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April 24, 2012, 06:09:36 PM |
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Has anyone confirmed this? Try loading a trivial amount on a wallet.dat, then upload it to dropbox. Dropbox is a pretty big system and if some one inside have processes running it as a honeypot i'm sure Dropbox mgmt would love to know. As any one contacted a sysadmin at DB?
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"It is, quite honestly, the biggest challenge to central banking since Andrew Jackson." -evoorhees
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deepceleron
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April 25, 2012, 02:07:43 PM |
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Has anyone confirmed this? Try loading a trivial amount on a wallet.dat, then upload it to dropbox. Dropbox is a pretty big system and if some one inside have processes running it as a honeypot i'm sure Dropbox mgmt would love to know. As any one contacted a sysadmin at DB?
A honeypot is a system designed to catch an evildoer, such as http://www.projecthoneypot.org/, where various systems are put up on the web as "hacker bait" with complete IP and access logging, so attack attempts and successful attacks can be documented and reported. Unauthorized access to your files hosted on dropbox by staff with elevated priviledges is not this. You should consider any file you upload to the "cloud" as essentially equivalent as posting it publicly for all to see - because when security fails at the company hosting your data (see: http://technorati.com/technology/article/major-dropbox-security-flaw-let-users/) that is is essentially what you have done. These companies don't have to provide you any security or service level whatsoever, their interest is profit, and they have terms of service that disclaims all liability. Anyone that has access to your computer via trojan or remote exploit has all the information needed to compromise your account ( http://dereknewton.com/2011/04/dropbox-authentication-static-host-ids/), and even malicious apps on your phone can steal your dropbox credentials ( http://www.cultofandroid.com/8177/facebook-dropbox-apps-have-serious-security-flaw-that-puts-your-personal-data-at-risk/). If you have used the same password anywhere else and that gets hacked, there's a good chance that the stolen credentials will be tried against all major cloud services. Unless you specifically contact dropbox and tell them of suspicious activity and they agree to set up a secretly logged account, if you test this theory by uploading another wallet and the coins get stolen, all you will likely get is denials or non-responses from dropbox. Even the most obvious security feature to discover if you have been hacked - showing you a log of IP addresses that have accessed your account - they have not implemented.
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doobadoo
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April 26, 2012, 01:27:21 AM |
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Has anyone confirmed this? Try loading a trivial amount on a wallet.dat, then upload it to dropbox. Dropbox is a pretty big system and if some one inside have processes running it as a honeypot i'm sure Dropbox mgmt would love to know. As any one contacted a sysadmin at DB?
A honeypot is a system designed to catch an evildoer, such as http://www.projecthoneypot.org/, where various systems are put up on the web as "hacker bait" with complete IP and access logging, so attack attempts and successful attacks can be documented and reported. Unauthorized access to your files hosted on dropbox by staff with elevated priviledges is not this. [/quote Maybe i used the wrong word. Black hole exploit or whatever it is. The OP suggested that he thought the hack happen inside DB, i guess b/c he's technologically adept and knows his box ain't been rooted. You should consider any file you upload to the "cloud" as essentially equivalent as posting it publicly for all to see - because when security fails at the company hosting your data (see: http://technorati.com/technology/article/major-dropbox-security-flaw-let-users/) that is is essentially what you have done. These companies don't have to provide you any security or service level whatsoever, their interest is profit, and they have terms of service that disclaims all liability. I already assume these services are in the clear anyhow. But it really sounds like piss poor business sense to risk the credibility of their company by being so lax about security. But I guess this whole cloud thing is so new its like the wild west.
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"It is, quite honestly, the biggest challenge to central banking since Andrew Jackson." -evoorhees
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