Author

Topic: [2014-03-18] New Bitcoin glitch: Blockchain suffers hours-long outage (Read 1616 times)

legendary
Activity: 1834
Merit: 1094
Learning the troll avoidance button :)
Sigh swear these journalists have a destroy bitcoin agenda with inaccuarate propaganda aka not a bitcoin glitch but a blockchain one or are too much in a shell to care otherwise
member
Activity: 439
Merit: 10
Blockchainhas was down but for a short period of time . Still it's not ok that it has happened but there is no system that work without any problems! We should remember that Blockchain has been working very good for a long time and no dubt it is going to work well in future!

Btw, agree the article is ridiculous
legendary
Activity: 980
Merit: 1004
Firstbits: Compromised. Thanks, Android!
It was down again yestoday! it was 25 min period it was down and it was 25 min I was nervous  Embarrassed

...and then a big red message showed up on the homepage: "All your bitcoins are belong to us"!

Relax guys! Cheesy

Or rather, harsh as it may come across... learn a little about the technology you're dropping your money into!
legendary
Activity: 1137
Merit: 1035
Bitcoin accepted here
It was down again yestoday! it was 25 min period it was down and it was 25 min I was nervous  Embarrassed

...and then a big red message showed up on the homepage: "All your bitcoins are belong to us"!

Relax guys! Cheesy
member
Activity: 147
Merit: 10
It was down again yestoday! it was 25 min period it was down and it was 25 min I was nervous  Embarrassed
legendary
Activity: 1148
Merit: 1008
If you want to walk on water, get out of the boat
And of course, blockchain.info does not hold anyone's money, as their system is designed so that the private keys are held client-side on the users machine, not on the blockchain.info servers as the article states. I think everyone here knew this already, though.

Does that mean if I reformat all of the computers I've accessed my blockchain.info account (including my phone), then I lose the bitcoins in my account?

I've heard your explanation plenty of times, but I don't technically understand it... I'm part of the morons who are relying upon blockchain for my "spending wallet" which isn't too much, but would suck if I lost it.
Here lies the problem: people are using bitcoin and related services without having any idea of how it works. Private key? Backup? Wallet? What is that? They just think everything works. So long for the "be your own bank"
legendary
Activity: 980
Merit: 1004
Firstbits: Compromised. Thanks, Android!
And of course, blockchain.info does not hold anyone's money, as their system is designed so that the private keys are held client-side on the users machine, not on the blockchain.info servers as the article states. I think everyone here knew this already, though.

Does that mean if I reformat all of the computers I've accessed my blockchain.info account (including my phone), then I lose the bitcoins in my account?

I've heard your explanation plenty of times, but I don't technically understand it... I'm part of the morons who are relying upon blockchain for my "spending wallet" which isn't too much, but would suck if I lost it.

I believe Blockchain lets you create a local backup. I would strongly recommend it, even a paper backup if they allow it.
hero member
Activity: 490
Merit: 500
That article is the BitShit of the day.  Roll Eyes
hero member
Activity: 658
Merit: 500
And of course, blockchain.info does not hold anyone's money, as their system is designed so that the private keys are held client-side on the users machine, not on the blockchain.info servers as the article states. I think everyone here knew this already, though.

Does that mean if I reformat all of the computers I've accessed my blockchain.info account (including my phone), then I lose the bitcoins in my account?

I've heard your explanation plenty of times, but I don't technically understand it... I'm part of the morons who are relying upon blockchain for my "spending wallet" which isn't too much, but would suck if I lost it.

the keys are on their servers, but encrypted with your password.
i'd strongly recommend their email or dropbox backup

yup, they dont store any password, just encrypted data. If you lose your passwd, you will lose all your btc.
legendary
Activity: 1428
Merit: 1000
And of course, blockchain.info does not hold anyone's money, as their system is designed so that the private keys are held client-side on the users machine, not on the blockchain.info servers as the article states. I think everyone here knew this already, though.

Does that mean if I reformat all of the computers I've accessed my blockchain.info account (including my phone), then I lose the bitcoins in my account?

I've heard your explanation plenty of times, but I don't technically understand it... I'm part of the morons who are relying upon blockchain for my "spending wallet" which isn't too much, but would suck if I lost it.

the keys are on their servers, but encrypted with your password.
i'd strongly recommend their email or dropbox backup
legendary
Activity: 1137
Merit: 1035
Bitcoin accepted here
And of course, blockchain.info does not hold anyone's money, as their system is designed so that the private keys are held client-side on the users machine, not on the blockchain.info servers as the article states. I think everyone here knew this already, though.

Does that mean if I reformat all of the computers I've accessed my blockchain.info account (including my phone), then I lose the bitcoins in my account?

I've heard your explanation plenty of times, but I don't technically understand it... I'm part of the morons who are relying upon blockchain for my "spending wallet" which isn't too much, but would suck if I lost it.

These links have a good explanation of it, better than I could explain (or type!) here, but you want to (a) keep a local (encrypted) backup just in case, and (b) if you know the blockchain.info password, they have it stored at AWS as their backup:

https://blockchain.info/wallet/how-it-works

And here:
https://blockchain.info/wallet/wallet-faq

:-)


Thanks for the links, but I'm still uncertain as to what the answer to kjlimo's question is. Where are the priv keys used by Blockchain.info stored on my HDD? And will I lose my wallet if I reformat the systems I accessed Blockchain.info from?

Thanks for the patience Smiley
legendary
Activity: 2114
Merit: 1031
And of course, blockchain.info does not hold anyone's money, as their system is designed so that the private keys are held client-side on the users machine, not on the blockchain.info servers as the article states. I think everyone here knew this already, though.

Does that mean if I reformat all of the computers I've accessed my blockchain.info account (including my phone), then I lose the bitcoins in my account?

I've heard your explanation plenty of times, but I don't technically understand it... I'm part of the morons who are relying upon blockchain for my "spending wallet" which isn't too much, but would suck if I lost it.

These links have a good explanation of it, better than I could explain (or type!) here, but you want to (a) keep a local (encrypted) backup just in case, and (b) if you know the blockchain.info password, they have it stored at AWS as their backup:

https://blockchain.info/wallet/how-it-works

And here:
https://blockchain.info/wallet/wallet-faq

:-)


Thanks lots; that's perfect!
legendary
Activity: 4256
Merit: 1313
And of course, blockchain.info does not hold anyone's money, as their system is designed so that the private keys are held client-side on the users machine, not on the blockchain.info servers as the article states. I think everyone here knew this already, though.

Does that mean if I reformat all of the computers I've accessed my blockchain.info account (including my phone), then I lose the bitcoins in my account?

I've heard your explanation plenty of times, but I don't technically understand it... I'm part of the morons who are relying upon blockchain for my "spending wallet" which isn't too much, but would suck if I lost it.

These links have a good explanation of it, better than I could explain (or type!) here, but you want to (a) keep a local (encrypted) backup just in case, and (b) if you know the blockchain.info password, they have it stored at AWS as their backup:

https://blockchain.info/wallet/how-it-works

And here:
https://blockchain.info/wallet/wallet-faq

:-)
legendary
Activity: 2114
Merit: 1031
And of course, blockchain.info does not hold anyone's money, as their system is designed so that the private keys are held client-side on the users machine, not on the blockchain.info servers as the article states. I think everyone here knew this already, though.

Does that mean if I reformat all of the computers I've accessed my blockchain.info account (including my phone), then I lose the bitcoins in my account?

I've heard your explanation plenty of times, but I don't technically understand it... I'm part of the morons who are relying upon blockchain for my "spending wallet" which isn't too much, but would suck if I lost it.
hero member
Activity: 658
Merit: 500
http://blockexplorer.com/ is up and running. My node is fine too. I see no blockchain outage.

Dont we love these FUDs by media?

I'm actually sick of these so called tech editor.....How can we even read their articles?
legendary
Activity: 3430
Merit: 3080
And of course, blockchain.info does not hold anyone's money, as their system is designed so that the private keys are held client-side on the users machine, not on the blockchain.info servers as the article states. I think everyone here knew this already, though.
sr. member
Activity: 868
Merit: 250
http://blockexplorer.com/ is up and running. My node is fine too. I see no blockchain outage.
legendary
Activity: 2212
Merit: 1199

Quote

With the high-profile collapse of Bitcoin exchange site Mt. Gox in February and then Flexcoin's failure earlier in March, Bitcoin backers could be forgiven for fretting about the fate of their virtual currency. Blockchain servers house nearly 1.4 million bitcoin wallets, but the company says the access problem is only a temporary glitch -- albeit one that's lasted more than 16 hours so far.
(...)

Omg ... this guy is crazy - he mentioned Mt Gox , FlexCoin and a BlockChain in one article Tongue
Perhaps he wanted to get more views.

Article is ridiculous.
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