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Topic: 1 BTC reward - page 3. (Read 725 times)

legendary
Activity: 3472
Merit: 3507
Crypto Swap Exchange
October 03, 2024, 09:22:52 AM
#16
The password is THE DATE

The only problem here is to understand which date format was used.

Maybe he can try the lowercase 'the date', although there are more variations, without space, capital 'The date' or some similar combination.  Roll Eyes

Maybe because he couldn't find it - it's always easier to open a new topic and start the whole story from the beginning.
What? A user has his own post history right from his own profile, there's a link to a user's own post history. Well, if that's already too complicated for some newbies, how do they even survive? Asking for a friend... jokes aside.
~snip~


It is not complicated only for beginners, because many times we could see that even some older members ask about things that they should know, considering that they have been on the forum for years. Let's take the example of @jerry0, who obviously doesn't know how to check his post history - because if he knew, he wouldn't be asking the same questions for years Wink

Finding their own post history on the forum is too complicated for someone who believes cracking a wallet file is easy.
legendary
Activity: 3234
Merit: 5637
Blackjack.fun-Free Raffle-Join&Win $50🎲
October 03, 2024, 05:08:01 AM
#15
Maybe because he couldn't find it - it's always easier to open a new topic and start the whole story from the beginning.
What? A user has his own post history right from his own profile, there's a link to a user's own post history. Well, if that's already too complicated for some newbies, how do they even survive? Asking for a friend... jokes aside.
~snip~


It is not complicated only for beginners, because many times we could see that even some older members ask about things that they should know, considering that they have been on the forum for years. Let's take the example of @jerry0, who obviously doesn't know how to check his post history - because if he knew, he wouldn't be asking the same questions for years Wink



Have you tried:  "August 23, 2015, 10:45:31 AM"

Did you maybe try the date your father registered on this forum? Given that the text file contains the name of this forum, it may be about that date.

Quote
Date Registered: 23 August 2015, 12:45:31



Maybe the letters in THE DATE offer some solution - because each letter represents a number on old keyboards that contained numbers below the letters. Those who used mobile phones 20+ years ago wrote text messages in a completely different way than today.

84 33 28 3 - year 1984, March 28
full member
Activity: 147
Merit: 83
aliveNFT.github.io | Track your love.
October 03, 2024, 04:43:32 AM
#14
The password is THE DATE

The only problem here is to understand which date format was used.
Perhaps your location will help here, since in the USA the MM/DD/YYYY format is more often used and in the European part DD/MM/YYYY

I think that if you have any records of your father or messages, correspondence where he used some date assignments or something related to it, then you can at least understand what format he has and then parse all possible dates starting from 1970, as indicated by @NotATether, I think it will make your search much easier.
legendary
Activity: 1568
Merit: 6660
bitcoincleanup.com / bitmixlist.org
October 03, 2024, 03:17:51 AM
#13
make a script that will write all the dates between say 2010 and 2018 or something, varying by the second, and let it run for a few hours.
Maybe it's a wedding date or any other special date, so 2010 may not be enough. But the date format may be a problem, I can think of many different ways to write "October 3th, 2024".

The format won't be a problem if OP still remembers it. But still, it should not be so big. There are only 1.7 billion or so values between the 1970 epoch and right now.

*Then again, I know how easy it is to forget things that I haven't written down, so I won't discount the fact that OP by now has probably forgotten everything about the password if he hasn't written it down.
legendary
Activity: 3290
Merit: 16489
Thick-Skinned Gang Leader and Golden Feather 2021
October 03, 2024, 03:10:56 AM
#12
make a script that will write all the dates between say 2010 and 2018 or something, varying by the second, and let it run for a few hours.
Maybe it's a wedding date or any other special date, so 2010 may not be enough. But the date format may be a problem, I can think of many different ways to write "October 3th, 2024".
legendary
Activity: 1568
Merit: 6660
bitcoincleanup.com / bitmixlist.org
October 03, 2024, 03:01:37 AM
#11
I glimpsed over your first topic from 2023. Were the details you posted from some notes from your father?

Have you tried some rather obvious choices for "THE DATE" like date of Bitcoin Whitepaper, date of Bitcoin Genesis block, date of your father's registration on bitcointalk, his birthdate, his wedding date, your birthdate? You may need to try various typing styles or what's just common for your father. Have you tried THE DATE literally, as written here in italics?  Cheesy

To systematically check every possible way and not missing something AND if you're that paranoid to avoid using tools for this, you need to be very good at not making errors and document every trial carefully. Reliable and reputable tools exist and are better for this, but you need to learn to use them properly when you want to refuse "easy guides". Many guides by good and reputable members are already in this forum.

If the date really is the password to the wallet.dat then you just need Hashcat. Maybe you don't even need hashcat because the amount of valid combinations for the date are extremely small compared to say searching all 16-character passwords. Just get a GPU farm, make a script that will write all the dates between say 2010 and 2018 or something, varying by the second, and let it run for a few hours.
jr. member
Activity: 46
Merit: 10
October 03, 2024, 02:15:10 AM
#10
Have you tried:  "August 23, 2015, 10:45:31 AM"
hero member
Activity: 714
Merit: 1010
Crypto Swap Exchange
October 02, 2024, 08:46:52 AM
#9
Maybe because he couldn't find it - it's always easier to open a new topic and start the whole story from the beginning.
What? A user has his own post history right from his own profile, there's a link to a user's own post history. Well, if that's already too complicated for some newbies, how do they even survive? Asking for a friend... jokes aside.


I've got wallet.dat and I was told by many different people that it's going to be easy to crack
I glimpsed over your first topic from 2023. Were the details you posted from some notes from your father?

Have you tried some rather obvious choices for "THE DATE" like date of Bitcoin Whitepaper, date of Bitcoin Genesis block, date of your father's registration on bitcointalk, his birthdate, his wedding date, your birthdate? You may need to try various typing styles or what's just common for your father. Have you tried THE DATE literally, as written here in italics?  Cheesy

To systematically check every possible way and not missing something AND if you're that paranoid to avoid using tools for this, you need to be very good at not making errors and document every trial carefully. Reliable and reputable tools exist and are better for this, but you need to learn to use them properly when you want to refuse "easy guides". Many guides by good and reputable members are already in this forum.


I'm not going to download your stuff, ...
I see no problem with using well reputed tools. You can do your stuff on an offline computer and completely wipe it afterwards, if you don't trust the tools. Just don't let it go online after you've exposed your wallet.dat on it.


... I'm not going to follow any "easy guides" on the Internet, I'm not sending you anything
Well, then do your own research. Your wallet.dat file won't reveal its password by itself. Whatever guide you find, you can ask here if you don't understand some steps. You may get answers here, too.

Of course, you shouldn't send your wallet.dat file, that's a given. You shouldn't even keep this wallet.dat file on an online computer which security status you can't assess! Store it in multiple copies only on offline devices and/or storage media. Judging by the balance of the one address you revealed, I recommend multiple redundant copies, two distinct places to avoid a single point/place of failure.

Sensitive data like private keys in a Bitcoin Core wallet.dat file are encrypted with a random encryption key. This encryption key then is AES encrypted with the wallet.dat's encryption password/passphrase, IIRC. To access and use private keys of your wallet, you need the wallet's encryption password/passphrase. The AES encrypted random encryption key by itself doesn't reveal anything about your wallet's private keys. So it's safe to share this AES encrypted chunk as long as you keep your wallet.dat safe and secure and only in your possession.

In your other thread you refused to get help by a good member of this forum who is unfortunately not anymore amoung us. When you say, tools like btcrecover and its setup to tackle your problem is above your head and you don't want external help from forum members, then you probably only have below professional option left.

If you want professional help, I can recommend to contact Dave (you will need to read past first posts full of skepticism by natural crypto space reflexes).
Quote
There has to be some legitimate business that does just this( recovers people's Bitcoin
Talk to Dave: Bitcoin Wallet Recovery Services. And watch out for phishing sites!
Dave will not ask for your wallet.dat file, he only needs that AES encrypted chunk of bytes. There are tools to extract those specific bytes from your wallet.dat. Dave will guide you accordingly in private communication. You only pay Dave if he accepts your challenge and when he succeeded to find the password of your wallet.


If I somehow get the whole balance, I can pay 1 BTC, no problem
Promisses, promisses, ...

Good luck and progress with your wallet.dat.
legendary
Activity: 3234
Merit: 5637
Blackjack.fun-Free Raffle-Join&Win $50🎲
October 02, 2024, 05:22:57 AM
#8
I've got wallet.dat and I was told by many different people that it's going to be easy to crack
Why didn't you continue in your last topic?
~snip~


Maybe because he couldn't find it - it's always easier to open a new topic and start the whole story from the beginning. However, with such an attitude, it is certainly not realistic to expect success - but perhaps it is not something that should be considered a tragedy.

Assuming that the story is true, the person who set up the protection had two possible goals - the first is that no one can gain access to those coins, and the second is that only those who will be intelligent enough to understand how to unlock them can get them.
legendary
Activity: 2870
Merit: 7490
Crypto Swap Exchange
October 02, 2024, 04:02:09 AM
#7
I've got wallet.dat and I was told by many different people that it's going to be easy to crack

If you got that wallet.dat from stranger or random website on internet, it's likely you got fake wallet.dat. Read this explanation,

The wallet file isn't fake per se, nor are the transactions it shows. What's fake about it is that it doesn't contain the private keys it claims it does.

The method of identification is to look at the corresponding version of the wallet code, check the data consistency, time, field, type, structure, It looks very complicated.
It actually is not that complicated. You don't need to check any data consistency, time, etc. You don't need to check any of the things you mentioned. You also don't really need to look at the wallet code because the data that they are manipulating doesn't change frequently, if ever. In fact, the specific database fields that are being modified will likely never change in order to maintain backwards compatibility with older wallet versions.

What the authors have done here is simply add fields which represent encrypted keys. These fields contain the pubkey and the encrypted private key which will typically just look like random data (because that's the point of encryption). What the authors have done is just create a field that contains the pubkey and random data (or in this case, a string) as the private key.

It is impossible for anyone (technical or not, professional or not) to identify that the wallet is "fake" by simply looking at it (besides the fact that common sense tells you its a scam). If done correctly, the supposed encrypted key will be garbage data and its veracity cannot be determined without knowing the decryption key. Of course, if it's just zeroes or some other obvious non-random data, then it can be easily determined. You can inspect the data of a wallet.dat file using BDB 4.6's db_dump tool.



But

I'm not going to download your stuff, I'm not going to follow any "easy guides" on the Internet, I'm not sending you anything

If I somehow get the whole balance, I can pay 1 BTC, no problem

It's good you took some precaution. But if really you think it's not fake wallet.dat, your only option is brute-force using software such as BTCRecover or Hashcat.
legendary
Activity: 2534
Merit: 6080
Self-proclaimed Genius
October 02, 2024, 01:22:28 AM
#6
I've got wallet.dat and I was told by many different people that it's going to be easy to crack
FYI, those are under the premise that the actual password is simply "the date".
Not easy if it's just a clue left by your father.

For example: my easily-accessible written account list doesn't have the actual password but a clue for me to remember which of my common passwords to use.

But at least if you try to bruteforce, you can deduce that the password is not simply a date if it exhausted the search.
That's not doable by hand though since you'll be typing each of the possible millions of combinations manually so you'll need the "stuff" to do that.
At least use the suggested "open-source" tool BTCRecover which you can audit the source code.
legendary
Activity: 3290
Merit: 16489
Thick-Skinned Gang Leader and Golden Feather 2021
October 02, 2024, 12:14:35 AM
#5
I've got wallet.dat and I was told by many different people that it's going to be easy to crack
Why didn't you continue in your last topic?

Quote
I'm not going to download your stuff, I'm not going to follow any "easy guides" on the Internet, I'm not sending you anything
Then just start typing those easy passwords. Good luck!
jr. member
Activity: 46
Merit: 10
October 02, 2024, 12:08:21 AM
#4
I've got wallet.dat and I was told by many different people that it's going to be easy to crack

But

I'm not going to download your stuff, I'm not going to follow any "easy guides" on the Internet, I'm not sending you anything

If I somehow get the whole balance, I can pay 1 BTC, no problem


Going to be hard to crack if you are not willing to download pywallet and hashcat.
legendary
Activity: 3374
Merit: 3095
Playbet.io - Crypto Casino and Sportsbook
October 01, 2024, 06:29:31 PM
#3
It seems that someone send you wallet.dat file and then the person who sent it to you is asking for a payment, I guess?

Take note there's no easy way to crack a wallet.dat file if the wallet is fake or even it's authentic if it's secured with a long passphrase. You can't bruteforce it in one day, a week, or months it would take decades, and the sad thing is, it might not even have stored BTC on the wallet.
legendary
Activity: 1512
Merit: 4795
Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform
October 01, 2024, 04:33:11 PM
#2
I do not really understood what you posted but I guess you want someone to help your brute force the wallet.dat password so that you can have access to the wallet and have access to the bitcoin on it. Definitely you bought the wallet and which means you have been scammed.
newbie
Activity: 10
Merit: 11
October 01, 2024, 04:26:04 PM
#1
I've got wallet.dat and I was told by many different people that it's going to be easy to crack

But

I'm not going to download your stuff, I'm not going to follow any "easy guides" on the Internet, I'm not sending you anything

If I somehow get the whole balance, I can pay 1 BTC, no problem
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