tommyl
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Activity: 27
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October 22, 2014, 08:38:57 AM |
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Did you guys see that at ~1:39 in the video, "brainwallet" is a link/annotation that says "Clue #13". I can't click it. Was it there before?
No I haven't seen it before, actually I'm sure it wasn't there before, but someone already got clue #13. Ok. Do you know what Clue #13 was?
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rapport
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October 22, 2014, 09:04:14 AM |
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Anybody have an idea? I think the number on the coin is 5784623964023x2 or 5784623864023x2 or 5784623064023x2. These numbers are on each first coin of all 6 sets. I tried to multiply etc... but couldn't decipher it. If anybody could, send me a portion(No amount is too small!). .S. Here is the link : https://i.imgur.com/CeBoEa8.png . Download the image and just zoom it. ~~MZ~~ 57846239640235784623964023 Can be factorised as primes which is what is done with the sepc256k1 curve where F = 2^256-2^32 etc (can't remember exactly) http://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=57846239640235784623964023Because there is a reverse R I thought these coin numbers were used to find a point on the curve since doubling a point (ie x2) requires a reflection of R ie 2P = Я because it's the only time R is used in math and its reversed. Basically I think this is how you find the private key for the ฿1 Other things to think about: Famous Russian princess? Anastasia "I like da Bitcoin" I like yes Bitcoin? A lot of this video is similar to the original Bitcoin video from weusecoins.com (the OLD and new video) I've kinda given up, because why run a contest if you don't keep up with it. I don't follow what you say about reversal. You gave idea to try playing with the numbers again. Repeat the number 6 times to get a big number: 578462396402357846239640235784623964023578462396402357846239640235784623964023 But it does not work since it is too big >>> 2**256 115792089237316195423570985008687907853269984665640564039457584007913129639936 Without repeating the numbers 6 times, all the numbers come out very small, and I don't think the private key will be a small number. But above is too simple. It does not use enough of the other clues, like the whitepaper and the long code that started with 9...
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Muhammed Zakir
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October 22, 2014, 12:30:32 PM |
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Anybody have an idea? I think the number on the coin is 5784623964023x2 or 5784623864023x2 or 5784623064023x2. These numbers are on each first coin of all 6 sets. I tried to multiply etc... but couldn't decipher it. If anybody could, send me a portion(No amount is too small!). ~~MZ~~ If you look at the next frames you will notice that the number change into 2784623964023x2 Nope. I saw like that when I looked. But I looked so many times after that and I found it is 5 but as it is very small, we will see it as 2. Check again and again! ~~MZ~~ Look again and zoom this image I downloaded this video a few days ago, I think they have updated it. Thanks for telling! ~~MZ~~
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KryptoChild
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Activity: 29
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October 22, 2014, 12:41:40 PM |
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If you look at the next frames you will notice that the number change into 2784623964023x2
It's interesting to notice that 2784623964023 is a prime number, which very likely is not a coincidence, it's moderately large prime. However, as someone said it's probably to small (0x1098FFBC) to be a direct private key in the ECDSA sense of the word, or "secret exponent" as Brainwallet.org calls it. Such "small" numbers are almost certainly in hash tables of people who brute force private keys and would be collected until now. It may be a part of the custom ECDSA implementation as order of ECDSA curve or something, but writing such a custom implementation would require bigger award then 1 BTC so this may be a blind alley.
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tommyl
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Activity: 27
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October 22, 2014, 01:05:59 PM |
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If you look at the next frames you will notice that the number change into 2784623964023x2
It's interesting to notice that 2784623964023 is a prime number, which very likely is not a coincidence, it's moderately large prime. However, as someone said it's probably to small (0x1098FFBC) to be a direct private key in the ECDSA sense of the word, or "secret exponent" as Brainwallet.org calls it. Such "small" numbers are almost certainly in hash tables of people who brute force private keys and would be collected until now. It may be a part of the custom ECDSA implementation as order of ECDSA curve or something, but writing such a custom implementation would require bigger award then 1 BTC so this may be a blind alley. 2784623964023 is not a prime number. It has two factors 11 and 253147633093.
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KryptoChild
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Activity: 29
Merit: 0
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October 22, 2014, 01:17:49 PM |
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If you look at the next frames you will notice that the number change into 2784623964023x2
It's interesting to notice that 2784623964023 is a prime number, which very likely is not a coincidence, it's moderately large prime. However, as someone said it's probably to small (0x1098FFBC) to be a direct private key in the ECDSA sense of the word, or "secret exponent" as Brainwallet.org calls it. Such "small" numbers are almost certainly in hash tables of people who brute force private keys and would be collected until now. It may be a part of the custom ECDSA implementation as order of ECDSA curve or something, but writing such a custom implementation would require bigger award then 1 BTC so this may be a blind alley. 2784623964023 is not a prime number. It has two factors 11 and 253147633093. My bad, I've done something wrong on http://www.wolframalpha.com/ and it reported it as a prime.
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mmortal03
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Activity: 1762
Merit: 1011
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October 22, 2014, 04:38:46 PM |
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Did you guys see that at ~1:39 in the video, "brainwallet" is a link/annotation that says "Clue #13". I can't click it. Was it there before?
No I haven't seen it before, actually I'm sure it wasn't there before, but someone already got clue #13 so it doesn't matter that much now. This was mentioned earlier in the thread. It wasn't there originally, but was added after Clue #5, and was what "9 YouTube 7" was referring to.
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hobala
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October 23, 2014, 12:29:45 AM |
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Anybody have an idea? I think the number on the coin is 5784623964023x2 or 5784623864023x2 or 5784623064023x2. These numbers are on each first coin of all 6 sets. I tried to multiply etc... but couldn't decipher it. If anybody could, send me a portion(No amount is too small!). ~~MZ~~ If you look at the next frames you will notice that the number change into 2784623964023x2 Nope. I saw like that when I looked. But I looked so many times after that and I found it is 5 but as it is very small, we will see it as 2. Check again and again! ~~MZ~~ Look again and zoom this image i have see thats picture 100 times,just make me headache...
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AMHashASICMINER ● ROCKMINER ● Purchase from: AMHash (20Th/s min) ● Havelock (1Gh/s min) Cloud-mining contracts: 0.0012 BTC per Gh ● Maintenance fee: $0.001551 per Gh per day ● Upto 6% Christmas Bonus
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davinchi
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Activity: 2100
Merit: 1058
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October 23, 2014, 02:34:42 AM |
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Puzzle ! I like it Gonna try it out .
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mmortal03
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Activity: 1762
Merit: 1011
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October 23, 2014, 03:17:31 AM |
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Less than an hour left.
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racsas
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October 23, 2014, 03:54:20 AM |
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I hope there will be another similar contest from rushwallet
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mmortal03
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Activity: 1762
Merit: 1011
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October 23, 2014, 04:04:16 AM |
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According to the countdown timer, the contest is over. Would be interesting to see if solving one of them now would still get you access to the Bitcoins. So far, the unclaimed bitcoins haven't been moved from their addresses.
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racsas
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October 23, 2014, 04:19:32 AM |
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According to the countdown timer, the contest is over. Would be interesting to see if solving one of them now would still get you access to the Bitcoins. So far, the unclaimed bitcoins haven't been moved from their addresses.
If it still there obviously someone who can entering are able to transfer it. If only they can enter
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dalek
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October 23, 2014, 04:19:49 AM |
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According to the countdown timer, the contest is over. Would be interesting to see if solving one of them now would still get you access to the Bitcoins. So far, the unclaimed bitcoins haven't been moved from their addresses.
I think the timer is actually based on the user's local timezone because it still shows 2 hours left on my browser.
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mmortal03
Legendary
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Activity: 1762
Merit: 1011
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October 23, 2014, 05:15:38 AM |
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According to the countdown timer, the contest is over. Would be interesting to see if solving one of them now would still get you access to the Bitcoins. So far, the unclaimed bitcoins haven't been moved from their addresses.
I think the timer is actually based on the user's local timezone because it still shows 2 hours left on my browser. Good to know.
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farrukh
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October 23, 2014, 03:17:20 PM |
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i think this contest is over now
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sakira
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October 23, 2014, 03:50:16 PM |
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i think this contest is over now
has ended? I was going crazy looking for a clue, and until it ends no one can open 1 BTC
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graves
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Activity: 14
Merit: 0
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October 23, 2014, 04:01:57 PM |
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wait people won, but they havent claimed their winnings?
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farrukh
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October 23, 2014, 04:04:06 PM |
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i think this contest is over now
has ended? I was going crazy looking for a clue, and until it ends no one can open 1 BTC yes its ended
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Muhammed Zakir
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October 23, 2014, 04:04:52 PM |
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wait people won, but they havent claimed their winnings?
No, only 2 wallets is unclaimed. They weren't insufficient clues or we are not intelligent enough to decipher it. ~~MZ~~
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