Author

Topic: Are all BTC addresses really unique? (Read 661 times)

legendary
Activity: 3416
Merit: 1912
The Concierge of Crypto
November 18, 2019, 11:20:59 AM
#38
Spending coins to brand new unused and unspent addresses kinda protects those coins, because the public key has not been published in a spend transaction. The public key is hashed twice and the only thing we have is the address itself.

The address and the public key are not the same. You can't get the public key just from the address.

Reusing addresses, where said address has spent any coin at least once means the public key of that particular address is already known.
legendary
Activity: 2268
Merit: 18711
November 15, 2019, 12:25:41 PM
#37
Exactly why not? I'm asking this because if even 10s of 1000s of ASICs won't be able to generate even a single address' private key that is already over the network
Having a public address "all over the network" does not make it any easier to generate the associated private key.

then considering that we don't reuse an address we have used before in a wallet and choose a different address to receive/send coins, won't it be a different private key that is attached to that new address?
Correct. Each new address you generate has its own private key.

Even if the older one gets compromised, how will the new address be hacked and the coins be removed from the same unless the wallet itself gets compromised?
It won't. If one private key is compromised, only the single address it corresponds to will also be compromised.

My point is that generating a new address every time doesn't increase security as an attacker who is brute forcing private keys is equally as likely to brute force the key to a brand new address as an old address which has been used many times. Note that the chance of this happening is so close to 0 as to be considered impossible. Not reusing addresses is good for privacy, but it makes little difference to security.*

So you mean to say that if I use a new native SegWit over an old native SegWit which already had so many inputs, I'll be charged the same on both the addresses when I try to send a transaction to an address that I keep same in both?
Yes. Provide you have the same number and type of inputs and outputs in each transaction, there is no difference in fee based on address age or previous transaction history.



*The caveat to this would be if ECDSA is broken in a way that allows an attacker to generate a private key from a public key, in which case address reuse would indeed be a security risk, but this is likely decades away, if ever.
legendary
Activity: 3052
Merit: 1273
November 15, 2019, 10:40:38 AM
#36
I really don't follow your comment.

I'm sorry if I wasn't able to convince you here.

Not reusing addresses is good for privacy, but it doesn't do anything for your security or protect against your keys being compromised.

Exactly why not? I'm asking this because if even 10s of 1000s of ASICs won't be able to generate even a single address' private key that is already over the network, then considering that we don't reuse an address we have used before in a wallet and choose a different address to receive/send coins, won't it be a different private key that is attached to that new address? Even if the older one gets compromised, how will the new address be hacked and the coins be removed from the same unless the wallet itself gets compromised? What if I use different wallets to use each new address from a different wallet itself at a time?

Correct me if I'm wrong, but we don't use more than single address not because we want to prove it that it's ours, but because a used address doesn't get charged higher fees compared to a newly generated one?
The only difference in fee between addresses is if you are using legacy, nested SegWit, or native SegWit. There is no difference in fee whether it's the first transaction from a new address or the ten thousandth transaction from a 10 year old address.

So you mean to say that if I use a new native SegWit over an old native SegWit which already had so many inputs, I'll be charged the same on both the addresses when I try to send a transaction to an address that I keep same in both?
legendary
Activity: 3416
Merit: 1912
The Concierge of Crypto
November 14, 2019, 03:03:42 PM
#35
I was about to suggest something similar, but refrained from doing so; it would still cost me shipping and handling. Keep in mind the "practical" definition of impossible as we've discussed in this thread.

Private data recovery companies don't have a better chance than flipping a coin to get the next bit correct.

FBI could not decrypt encrypted TrueCrypt hard drives before. I don't think they have anything better today to recover single pass wiped magnetic drives, especially if they were previously encrypted.
legendary
Activity: 3416
Merit: 1912
The Concierge of Crypto
November 14, 2019, 02:06:16 PM
#34
People have tried it. It's impossible. Single pass zero wipe works. Saves you time too.


https://www.howtogeek.com/115573/htg-explains-why-you-only-have-to-wipe-a-disk-once-to-erase-it/
https://forums.anandtech.com/threads/how-many-passes-to-wipe-a-hdd.2289766/
https://forums.anandtech.com/threads/is-one-pass-enough.2048133/
https://www.wilderssecurity.com/threads/secure-deletion-a-single-overwrite-will-do-it.230855/

I used to do 35 Gutmann passes for fun. Waste of time though.

Ask anyone who uses Encase or whatever forensic software.

Incidentally the last link above mentions Craig Wright and Dave Kleiman ... ... ... in 2009. He got one thing right.

Quote
There is nothing in "known" existence that can reliably recover data from a hard drive that has been written with even one pass of any pattern.


If you find one, kindly let us know. My friends in the military don't know any better and just melt them = physical destruction. I'd rather save and reuse the drives, you can still store movies in them. Some of us use them for target practice.
legendary
Activity: 2268
Merit: 18711
November 14, 2019, 11:07:25 AM
#33
I really don't follow your comment.

Well, my thinking says that those who'd use the same address again and again might have the unnatural fear of getting their address/es compromised at some point, but if we keep changing the receiving addresses every single time, is there any need for this discussion that remains?
Not reusing addresses is good for privacy, but it doesn't do anything for your security or protect against your keys being compromised.

Are the combinations going to be limited to those billions of addresses already generated even if the whole world accepts BTC and starts using new receiving address for each of their transaction?
Even if everyone in the world generates thousands of new addresses each day, we won't even get through a tiny fraction of a single percent of all new addresses before the death of the universe.

Correct me if I'm wrong, but we don't use more than single address not because we want to prove it that it's ours, but because a used address doesn't get charged higher fees compared to a newly generated one?
The only difference in fee between addresses is if you are using legacy, nested SegWit, or native SegWit. There is no difference in fee whether it's the first transaction from a new address or the ten thousandth transaction from a 10 year old address.
legendary
Activity: 3052
Merit: 1273
November 14, 2019, 10:27:33 AM
#32
Well, my thinking says that those who'd use the same address again and again might have the unnatural fear of getting their address/es compromised at some point, but if we keep changing the receiving addresses every single time, is there any need for this discussion that remains? Are the combinations going to be limited to those billions of addresses already generated even if the whole world accepts BTC and starts using new receiving address for each of their transaction?

Correct me if I'm wrong, but we don't use more than single address not because we want to prove it that it's ours, but because a used address doesn't get charged higher fees compared to a newly generated one?
legendary
Activity: 2268
Merit: 18711
November 09, 2019, 04:55:25 AM
#31
but so is the chance of getting struck by lightning.
This is the bottom line. If you are worried about the odds of someone randomly generating your address and stealing all your coins, then you should be paralyzed with fear about the odds of other far more terrible things things happening to you.

We've already established there are 2160 addresses.
Assuming a 16 digit credit card number, with a 3 digit security code and an expiry month at some point in the next 5 years (60 potential months), then there are only 6*1020 possible combinations. So the chance of someone randomly entering your credit card details correctly is somewhere around 2.4 billion billion billion times more likely than them randomly generating a private key linked to your address.
About 1 in 10,000 people have a brain aneurysm that they didn't know about rupture every year, and around 15% of those people die within a couple of minutes. So you have about a 1 in 67,000 chance of immediate, sudden, and unpredictable death at any time just from a brain aneurysm. 1 in 67,000 is about 22 million trillion trillion trillion times more likely than 1 in 2160.
legendary
Activity: 3416
Merit: 1912
The Concierge of Crypto
November 08, 2019, 03:30:11 PM
#30
Once the odds of anything exceed a few billion I usually say it is impossible, in casual conversations, depending on the topic we are talking about. Winning the lottery is still possible and probable, but so is the chance of getting struck by lightning.

Recovering data from a spinning platter HDD that has been zero wiped ONCE by DBAN, = impossible.
Bitcoin same address from a million different wallet users = impossible.
Cracking any randomly generated password longer than 16~20 characters through brute force = impossible. (this depends, but ... bleh.)
Mine the next bitcoin block solo using your CPU = impossible.
Mine the next bitcoin block solo with the latest GPU = impossible.

Mine any other altcoin with CPU/GPU = oh, still possible, probably need to go on pool though.

Yah... soooo, there is a chance ... right; keep dreaming . Smiley

hero member
Activity: 1358
Merit: 635
November 08, 2019, 02:22:48 PM
#29
That means that each single key may correspond roughly to 2256 / 2160 = 296 addresses, right?

Roughly each address can be accessible through the set of  296  keys.

Your first statement is the wrong way round, but your second statement is correct. There are 296* private keys per address if they are all distributed evenly.

*Actually slightly less, since there are slightly less than 2256 total private keys, but the difference is minuscule.

My bad, mine first assertion is totally reversing black and white, perhaps I have been deeply drunk when I wrote that.  Smiley  What I actually meant is expressed by the second one. And agree, all that is correct only at even distribution.
HCP
legendary
Activity: 2086
Merit: 4361
November 08, 2019, 11:43:26 AM
#28
Don't sound like that guy "soooo, there is a chance?" ...
But there is! Tongue

Seriously tho... the way to sum this up is by defining the the difference between "Possible" and "Probable".

Yes, it is technically possible that there could be a collision... as the chance is non-zero after all! However given the enormity of the set space etc, the odds are so incredibly incredibly INCREDIBLY tiny that it just is NOT probable.

In fact, it is so improbable, that for all intents and purposes it is regarded as "impossible".
legendary
Activity: 3416
Merit: 1912
The Concierge of Crypto
November 08, 2019, 10:53:28 AM
#27
I did say, a lot of people really do not understand time beyond a thousand years, much less millions or billions or the age of the universe.

It's easy to say that there are so many grains of sand on the planet, but people can't even think to count how many there are in a single beach. It's simply too abstract, and yet they try to understand it; you have to look at it from a different perspective and we really can't teach that to some people, they just won't get it.

It's almost like, you have to intentionally not get it, to get it.

Are there more grains of sands on earth or are there more stars in the universe? Obviously, grains and stars can't be counted, not literally. But you can guestimate.

I was asked this or pondered this when I was 6 or 8 years old or something like that.

Current estimates puts sand grains = 7.5 x 10^18 = seven quintillion, five hundred quadrillion grains of sand.

Stars = 70 thousand million, million, million million stars in the observable universe (a 2003 estimate) so we got multiple stars for every grain of sand.

It just makes sense, since our planet is a small one, it's fixed, its finite, whereas the stars, we haven't been able to go much beyond our own planet (ok, the moon, mars, maybe the solar system)...


However, if you get 10 drops of water, the number of H2O molecules is about the number of stars we know of.


Now start talking about private keys or BTC addresses, and it's all electronic with no physical manifestation, and ... think of it as molecules or atoms in water drops. Really really tiny small thingies that exist (or don't exist) in the blockchain.

Humans simply can not handle "the biggitude." We are surrounded by vastness.



To the question, I think astronomer Carl Sagan once stated that "there are more stars in our Universe than there are grains of sand on all the beaches on Earth".

https://www.worldatlas.com/articles/are-there-more-grains-of-sand-or-stars-in-the-earth.html

Have fun.


Oh, to answer the original question, are all BTC addresses really unique? For all practical intents and purposes, they are. Technically, they are limited but to such large numbers that most people simply can not understand there is no chance it happens.

Don't sound like that guy "soooo, there is a chance?" ...
legendary
Activity: 1946
Merit: 1427
November 08, 2019, 08:46:14 AM
#26
Thank you,

but, about this, when it takes 3 hours to compute for 1Bitcoi prefix, 3 hours is sufficient to generate billions addresses if you see what I mean


Well yes, but a billion adresses still is absolutely nothing.

See Danny Hamiltons answer to put things in perspective.

2^30 (≈≈a billion) vs 2^160 (all the adresses in existence, well- let's just assume that for simplicity) - the difference is unimaginable.

But, most pools use ASICS only which perform SHA-256 only- so- (someone correct me if i'm wrong here.)- it would be wrong to compare the "computing"/hash power of a pool to generating addresses.

You are correct.

The ASICs used by mining pools are not capable of generating bitcoin addresses.

However, lets use our imagination and create a world where some very wealthy person decides to invest all of their wealth into creating special ASICs that are capable of generating Bitcoin addresses.

Lets imagine that they are able to generate addresses at the same rate that the current bitcoin network is capable of generating hashes.  In other words, lets imagine that they can generate 115,000,000,000,000,000,000 addresses per second.

There are 2160 different bitcoin addresses of the type that start with a 1 (legacy, P2PKH).

(2160 addresses) / (115 X 1018 addresses per second) = 1.27 X 1028 seconds.

So, it would take about 1,270,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 seconds to generate all possible addresses (assuming you never generated the same address twice).
Replace 115*10^18 by 2^30 ( ≈a billion p second ), and you can perhaps put things into perspective a bit better.
jr. member
Activity: 352
Merit: 2
November 08, 2019, 08:42:18 AM
#25
(give or take a couple orders of magnitude)
I'd say give a few dozen orders of magnitude. Tongue

Assuming the human race has spread across multiple planets in the next 10 billion years, lets give a generous population estimate of 1 trillion individuals. Even if every single one of those 1 trillion people generates 100 new bitcoin private keys every day (why anyone would need that many I don't know) for 10 billion years, we are still only talking about (1 trillion * 100 * 10 billion * 365) = 3.65*1026 keys.

For OP, even in my hypothetical scenario above, we would still only have generated approximately 0.0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000003% of all possible private keys. If we continued to use bitcoin for a trillion trillion trillion years, then we might have to start worrying about collisions, but given that all the stars in the universe will die in only 100 trillion years, we will probably have more pressing issues to deal with.

But there are chances you may get your seeds or phrases randomly guessed by someone and a person who is intentionally doing it, gets lucky some day.
Only if you are silly enough to pick your own seed phrase or use a brainwallet. If you use a proper randomly generated seed phrase, the chances of someone guessing it are essentially the same as the chances of someone generating the same seed as you, as has been outlined above, i.e. never going to happen.
Ok,
Now using the computation power used by a mining pool, what's the time needed to generate all the possible addresses ??
infinite, well not really.

Depending on the source you use, you can calculate the time it would take to generate all possible adresses.
Some more info can be found here-> https://bitcoin.stackexchange.com/questions/2847/how-long-would-it-take-a-large-computer-to-crack-a-private-key

But, most pools use ASICS only which perform SHA-256 only- so- (someone correct me if i'm wrong here.)- it would be wrong to compare the "computing"/hash power of a pool to generating addresses.

Thank you,

but, about this, when it takes 3 hours to compute for "1Bitcoi" prefix, 3 hours is sufficient to generate billions addresses if you see what I mean

legendary
Activity: 2268
Merit: 18711
November 08, 2019, 07:10:22 AM
#24
That means that each single key may correspond roughly to 2256 / 2160 = 296 addresses, right?

Roughly each address can be accessible through the set of  296  keys.

Your first statement is the wrong way round, but your second statement is correct. There are 296* private keys per address if they are all distributed evenly.

*Actually slightly less, since there are slightly less than 2256 total private keys, but the difference is minuscule.
legendary
Activity: 3122
Merit: 2178
Playgram - The Telegram Casino
November 08, 2019, 06:20:09 AM
#23
Then you didn't get what I have intended to say, There are 2256 private keys. There are 2160 legacy addresses  calculated from those  keys by applying RIPEMD-160 to SHA-256 hash of those keys. It means at the end we  have collision as only 2160 legacy addresses will correspond to the whole set of  2256 private keys. Roughly each address can be accessible through the set of  296  keys.

Ah... sorry, now I get what you mean. Yes, that sounds about right.


To generate all the possible addresses (assuming you never generated the same address twice), it would require you to continue generating addresses for another:
(1.27 X 1028 seconds to generate ALL addresses) / (4.35 X 1017 seconds in the universe) = 29,195,402,299 entire universes worth of time.

Let's not forget though that assuming Moore's Law applies to this hypothetical technology we'd only have about 70 years until computation time will be reduced to a single universe worth of time.

Just sayin'

(70 years of computation power doubling every two years => 2^35 = 34,359,738,368 times the computation power you started with. Yes I'm aware that technically that's neither what Moore's Law states nor how any of this works.)
HCP
legendary
Activity: 2086
Merit: 4361
November 07, 2019, 06:04:18 PM
#22
Isn't it true that even if we add a passphrase to secure our wallet, it does not add any security locks to the seed...
You need to be careful with the term "passphrase" when used in relation to seeds (assuming you're talking about BIP39 seed mnemonics).

In some instances, this is simply a wallet "passphrase" (such as the one used in Electrum) and is used for encrypting data within the wallet file or encrypting the wallet file itself.

In other instances, it refers to the BIP39 "passphrase"... which does actually add a "security lock" of sorts to your seed mnemonic. This is commonly referred to as the "25th word" (although it doesn't need to be a single word, but can be a sentence or phrase or random characters). All BIP39 wallets should provide this functionality.

By using the "25th word" passphrase, even if your seed mnemonic itself was compromised, the attacker would have no way to replicate your actual private keys without the "25th word" passphrase.

... and if seed is compromised, the wallet software will not ask for the old passphrase but a new passphrase to the person who hacked it, right?
The situation you are referring to, is like the simple "wallet password" functionality in Electrum... all that does is encrypt the data in the wallet file, or encrypts the entire file depending on your settings. That password is ONLY relevant to that specific copy of the wallet file. In this instance, if someone were to get access to your seed mnemonic, they could generate their own copy of your wallet file by restoring from your seed mnemonic, that has NO password (or a password of their own choosing).


You should note that Electrum ALSO allows you to seed a "25th word" passphrase in addition to the wallet password... and they don't need to be the same! The terminology used in Electrum is "Extend your seed with custom words"... and accessed by clicking the "Options" button when creating (or restoring) the wallet:

legendary
Activity: 3472
Merit: 4801
November 07, 2019, 05:12:14 PM
#21
But, most pools use ASICS only which perform SHA-256 only- so- (someone correct me if i'm wrong here.)- it would be wrong to compare the "computing"/hash power of a pool to generating addresses.

You are correct.

The ASICs used by mining pools are not capable of generating bitcoin addresses.

However, lets use our imagination and create a world where some very wealthy person decides to invest all of their wealth into creating special ASICs that are capable of generating Bitcoin addresses.

Lets imagine that they are able to generate addresses at the same rate that the current bitcoin network is capable of generating hashes.  In other words, lets imagine that they can generate 115,000,000,000,000,000,000 addresses per second.

There are 2160 different bitcoin addresses of the type that start with a 1 (legacy, P2PKH).

(2160 addresses) / (115 X 1018 addresses per second) = 1.27 X 1028 seconds.

So, it would take about 1,270,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 seconds to generate all possible addresses (assuming you never generated the same address twice).

The estimated time that the universe has existed since the "Big Bang" is about 13.772 Billion Years.

(13,772,000,000 years) X (31,557,600 seconds per year) = 434,611,267,200,000,000 seconds since the beginning of the universe.

So, the universe has existed for approximately 4.35 X 1017 seconds.

This means that if you used all that imaginary address generating power and started generating addresses at the moment that the Big Bang happened...

By now, you would have generated approximately:
(4.35X1017 seconds in the universe) / (1.27 X 1028 seconds to generate ALL addresses) = 0.00000343% of all possible addresses.

To generate all the possible addresses (assuming you never generated the same address twice), it would require you to continue generating addresses for another:
(1.27 X 1028 seconds to generate ALL addresses) / (4.35 X 1017 seconds in the universe) = 29,195,402,299 entire universes worth of time.
legendary
Activity: 1946
Merit: 1427
November 07, 2019, 04:18:15 PM
#20
(give or take a couple orders of magnitude)
I'd say give a few dozen orders of magnitude. Tongue

Assuming the human race has spread across multiple planets in the next 10 billion years, lets give a generous population estimate of 1 trillion individuals. Even if every single one of those 1 trillion people generates 100 new bitcoin private keys every day (why anyone would need that many I don't know) for 10 billion years, we are still only talking about (1 trillion * 100 * 10 billion * 365) = 3.65*1026 keys.

For OP, even in my hypothetical scenario above, we would still only have generated approximately 0.0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000003% of all possible private keys. If we continued to use bitcoin for a trillion trillion trillion years, then we might have to start worrying about collisions, but given that all the stars in the universe will die in only 100 trillion years, we will probably have more pressing issues to deal with.

But there are chances you may get your seeds or phrases randomly guessed by someone and a person who is intentionally doing it, gets lucky some day.
Only if you are silly enough to pick your own seed phrase or use a brainwallet. If you use a proper randomly generated seed phrase, the chances of someone guessing it are essentially the same as the chances of someone generating the same seed as you, as has been outlined above, i.e. never going to happen.
Ok,
Now using the computation power used by a mining pool, what's the time needed to generate all the possible addresses ??
infinite, well not really.

Depending on the source you use, you can calculate the time it would take to generate all possible adresses.
Some more info can be found here-> https://bitcoin.stackexchange.com/questions/2847/how-long-would-it-take-a-large-computer-to-crack-a-private-key

But, most pools use ASICS only which perform SHA-256 only- so- (someone correct me if i'm wrong here.)- it would be wrong to compare the "computing"/hash power of a pool to generating addresses.
jr. member
Activity: 352
Merit: 2
November 07, 2019, 04:08:08 PM
#19
(give or take a couple orders of magnitude)
I'd say give a few dozen orders of magnitude. Tongue

Assuming the human race has spread across multiple planets in the next 10 billion years, lets give a generous population estimate of 1 trillion individuals. Even if every single one of those 1 trillion people generates 100 new bitcoin private keys every day (why anyone would need that many I don't know) for 10 billion years, we are still only talking about (1 trillion * 100 * 10 billion * 365) = 3.65*1026 keys.

For OP, even in my hypothetical scenario above, we would still only have generated approximately 0.0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000003% of all possible private keys. If we continued to use bitcoin for a trillion trillion trillion years, then we might have to start worrying about collisions, but given that all the stars in the universe will die in only 100 trillion years, we will probably have more pressing issues to deal with.

But there are chances you may get your seeds or phrases randomly guessed by someone and a person who is intentionally doing it, gets lucky some day.
Only if you are silly enough to pick your own seed phrase or use a brainwallet. If you use a proper randomly generated seed phrase, the chances of someone guessing it are essentially the same as the chances of someone generating the same seed as you, as has been outlined above, i.e. never going to happen.
Ok,
Now using the computation power used by a mining pool, what's the time needed to generate all the possible addresses ??
hero member
Activity: 1358
Merit: 635
November 07, 2019, 04:06:33 PM
#18
That means that each single key may correspond roughly to 2256 / 2160 = 296 addresses, right?

No, it's straight up 2^160 addresses, no need to divide. RIPEMD-160 is used to hash the SHA-256 hash of the corresponding public key [1], reducing the P2PKH address space from a potential 2^256* to 2^160.

*slightly smaller, ECDA's private key space does not cover the full 2^256 [2]


So in fact addresses  are not unique in their nature cuz bunches of them have the same private keys.

There's also P2SH and Bech32 Bitcoin addresses, so any private key corresponds to at least 3 valid Bitcoin addresses.



[1] https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Technical_background_of_version_1_Bitcoin_addresses
[2] https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Private_key


Then you didn't get what I have intended to say, There are 2256 private keys. There are 2160 legacy addresses  calculated from those  keys by applying RIPEMD-160 to SHA-256 hash of those keys. It means at the end we  have collision as only 2160 legacy addresses will correspond to the whole set of  2256 private keys. Roughly each address can be accessible through the set of  296  keys.
legendary
Activity: 3122
Merit: 2178
Playgram - The Telegram Casino
November 07, 2019, 03:33:48 PM
#17
That means that each single key may correspond roughly to 2256 / 2160 = 296 addresses, right?

No, it's straight up 2^160 addresses, no need to divide. RIPEMD-160 is used to hash the SHA-256 hash of the corresponding public key [1], reducing the P2PKH address space from a potential 2^256* to 2^160.

*slightly smaller, ECDA's private key space does not cover the full 2^256 [2]


So in fact addresses  are not unique in their nature cuz bunches of them have the same private keys.

There's also P2SH and Bech32 Bitcoin addresses, so any private key corresponds to at least 3 valid Bitcoin addresses.



[1] https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Technical_background_of_version_1_Bitcoin_addresses
[2] https://en.bitcoin.it/wiki/Private_key

hero member
Activity: 1358
Merit: 635
November 07, 2019, 03:02:53 PM
#16




Keys are 256 bit in length and are hashed in a 160 bit address.(2^160th power) Divide it by the world population and you have about 215,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 addresses per capita.(2.15 x 10^38)

That means that each single key may correspond roughly to 2256 / 2160 = 296 addresses, right? So in fact addresses  are not unique in their nature cuz bunches of them have the same private keys.
legendary
Activity: 3122
Merit: 2178
Playgram - The Telegram Casino
November 05, 2019, 04:16:51 AM
#15
@DannyHamilton,
Isn't it true that even if we add a passphrase to secure our wallet, it does not add any security locks to the seed and if seed is compromised, the wallet software will not ask for the old passphrase but a new passphrase to the person who hacked it, right?

Depends on the wallet. In some cases the password is used to extend the seed phrase, in some cases it's used to encrypt the wallet file.

e.g. Trezor and Ledger use the password to extend the seed phrase (ie. the private keys are derived from the seed phrase + password), so an adversary can't do anything with the seed phrase alone (except trying to brute-force the accompanying password).


Confirmed? What if they remain unconfirmed during the time the original owner of the wallet sees and catches the fraudulent activity? Are there any chances of reversal?

You can attempt to send a competing transaction spending the same coins with a higher transaction fee, maybe submitting the transaction to an accelerator while you're at it. Unless your adversary has set a really low fee you're unlikely to succeed though.
legendary
Activity: 2618
Merit: 1105
November 05, 2019, 02:10:25 AM
#14
@DannyHamilton,
Isn't it true that even if we add a passphrase to secure our wallet, it does not add any security locks to the seed and if seed is compromised, the wallet software will not ask for the old passphrase but a new passphrase to the person who hacked it, right?

... snip...
If they send those coins somewhere else and get that transaction confirmed, then you will have lost the coins.
...snip...

Confirmed? What if they remain unconfirmed during the time the original owner of the wallet sees and catches the fraudulent activity? Are there any chances of reversal?
legendary
Activity: 3472
Merit: 4801
November 04, 2019, 09:48:30 AM
#13
Everyone here has done a pretty good job of trying to help you understand that an ACCIDENTAL collision with a RANDOMLY generated address simply isn't going to happen in the amount of time that humans will likely exist.

That being said, it is possible for INTENTIONAL collisions to happen with addresses that aren't completely random (or aren't derived from a properly random seed).

For example., I could generate an address, look up the private key (or seed), send that private key (or seed) to you, and you could import it into your own wallet.  If you do that, then we will both have the same address in our wallets.

So, to answer your technical question about what happens when two wallets have the same address, in that case, both wallets will display the funds to both users.  Whomever spends the coins first (more specifically gets the transaction spending the coins CONFIRMED first) will be the one that wins, and the other will see the funds vanish from their wallet. This is because the funds are NOT in the wallet.  The funds are on the blockchain.  Both wallets have access to identical copies of the blockchain.  The wallet just stores the private keys and then looks at the blockchain to see which funds those private keys can spend.

This is why it is important to protect your private keys.  If an attacker gains access to your private keys (and/or seed), then they can import those private keys into their own wallet and have access to your coins whenever they arrive at the associated address.  If they send those coins somewhere else and get that transaction confirmed, then you will have lost the coins.

The blockchain can't tell the difference between the original owner of a private key and a stolen private key.  The nodes just check to see if the transaction is properly signed. If it is, then the transaction is valid regardless of who generated the signature.
legendary
Activity: 3416
Merit: 1912
The Concierge of Crypto
November 04, 2019, 09:34:42 AM
#12
Don't sound like ... "so. there is a chance ... "

Quote
until computers are built from something other than matter and occupy something other than space.

There is a much better chance of you winning the PowerBall or Mega Millions or Grand Lotto Super Max 20 times in a row, then get struck by lightning 10 times in a row without dying, than for anyone else to get the same bitcoin address as you accidentally.

It takes light more than 4 hours to get to Pluto from the Sun.

8 Random Diceware words getting cracked at 1 trillion attempts per second will take 15 times the age of the universe, on average.


noooo.. people and other mostly normal human beings do not understand time when expressed beyond a million years. There's only less than ten thousand years of recorded human history.

We also don't understand distances beyond our own little planet, and people still get confused within the same city.
legendary
Activity: 3122
Merit: 2178
Playgram - The Telegram Casino
November 04, 2019, 06:56:00 AM
#11
Okay, I get it that chances are nonexistent that it will ever happen to me personally that I will have an address which is the same as another one, but at some point EVER there will be 2 persons with the same BTC address. Whether it is now or in 10 years, it will happen some time.

That's assuming people still exist then Smiley

The question is not "Whether it is now or in 10 years" but more like "Whether it is now or in 10 billion years" (give or take a couple orders of magnitude)

The equation where x = ∞ and y = the number of users creating x amount of addresses will only make it possible for the graph to dissolve this situation into an issue where people may face a 'collision' to each other. But there are chances you may get your seeds or phrases randomly guessed by someone and a person who is intentionally doing it, gets lucky some day.

I mean yeah, there's also a non-zero chance for a bank robber to be able to walk through the wall straight into a bank's vault due to quantum tunneling.

https://physics.stackexchange.com/a/243715

It's just that that chance is very very small. Unlikely-to-occur-before-the-heat-death-of-the-universe small.

Granted the chance of a random private key collision is slightly higher, but still not within a realm that makes sense to consider as a threat model.
legendary
Activity: 2268
Merit: 18711
November 04, 2019, 06:51:10 AM
#10
(give or take a couple orders of magnitude)
I'd say give a few dozen orders of magnitude. Tongue

Assuming the human race has spread across multiple planets in the next 10 billion years, lets give a generous population estimate of 1 trillion individuals. Even if every single one of those 1 trillion people generates 100 new bitcoin private keys every day (why anyone would need that many I don't know) for 10 billion years, we are still only talking about (1 trillion * 100 * 10 billion * 365) = 3.65*1026 keys.

For OP, even in my hypothetical scenario above, we would still only have generated approximately 0.0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000003% of all possible private keys. If we continued to use bitcoin for a trillion trillion trillion years, then we might have to start worrying about collisions, but given that all the stars in the universe will die in only 100 trillion years, we will probably have more pressing issues to deal with.

But there are chances you may get your seeds or phrases randomly guessed by someone and a person who is intentionally doing it, gets lucky some day.
Only if you are silly enough to pick your own seed phrase or use a brainwallet. If you use a proper randomly generated seed phrase, the chances of someone guessing it are essentially the same as the chances of someone generating the same seed as you, as has been outlined above, i.e. never going to happen.
legendary
Activity: 2618
Merit: 1105
November 04, 2019, 05:40:12 AM
#9
Okay, I get it that chances are nonexistent that it will ever happen to me personally that I will have an address which is the same as another one, but at some point EVER there will be 2 persons with the same BTC address. Whether it is now or in 10 years, it will happen some time.

That's assuming people still exist then Smiley

The question is not "Whether it is now or in 10 years" but more like "Whether it is now or in 10 billion years" (give or take a couple orders of magnitude)

The equation where x = ∞ and y = the number of users creating x amount of addresses will only make it possible for the graph to dissolve this situation into an issue where people may face a 'collision' to each other. But there are chances you may get your seeds or phrases randomly guessed by someone and a person who is intentionally doing it, gets lucky some day.
legendary
Activity: 3122
Merit: 2178
Playgram - The Telegram Casino
November 04, 2019, 05:31:32 AM
#8
Okay, I get it that chances are nonexistent that it will ever happen to me personally that I will have an address which is the same as another one, but at some point EVER there will be 2 persons with the same BTC address. Whether it is now or in 10 years, it will happen some time.

That's assuming people still exist then Smiley

The question is not "Whether it is now or in 10 years" but more like "Whether it is now or in 10 billion years" (give or take a couple orders of magnitude)
legendary
Activity: 3668
Merit: 6382
Looking for campaign manager? Contact icopress!
November 04, 2019, 02:21:14 AM
#7
No, you don't. You really have no idea just how large the numbers involved are. (It's not your fault; humans are notoriously bad at conceptualising numbers greater than a quadrillion or so.)

Imho the best way to make them understand is to show them this image; it helps people get a glimpse of the immensity of the numbers involved:


legendary
Activity: 4536
Merit: 3188
Vile Vixen and Miss Bitcointalk 2021-2023
November 04, 2019, 01:08:01 AM
#6
Okay, I get it
No, you don't. You really have no idea just how large the numbers involved are. (It's not your fault; humans are notoriously bad at conceptualising numbers greater than a quadrillion or so.)
legendary
Activity: 2534
Merit: 6080
Self-proclaimed Genius
November 03, 2019, 10:29:52 PM
#5
Whether it is now or in 10 years, it will happen some time.
10 years is a very narrow time-frame for a collision to happen, even 1000 years isn't even enough for an "accidental" collision.
The only chance for it to happen in a short period is to find vulnerabilities in both the hashing algorithm used by generating addresses and secp256k1 (get the prv key from the pub key);
ex. a sudden "quantum supremacy".

Quote from: Felix-Hosman
What would happen then if a payment is made to that address? Will it be sent to the wallet owner who connects to the internet first? Or to the wallet owner who had this BTC address first?
FYI, Bitcoins aren't stored in wallets/clients, it's in the blockchain (nodes), and to spend it, you need the address' private key.
So, the answer to this "what if" question is: The first one to make a (higher fee -> confirmed) transaction can spend the bitcoin.
newbie
Activity: 20
Merit: 5
November 03, 2019, 09:50:09 PM
#4
Okay, I get it that chances are nonexistent that it will ever happen to me personally that I will have an address which is the same as another one, but at some point EVER there will be 2 persons with the same BTC address. Whether it is now or in 10 years, it will happen some time.
What would happen then if a payment is made to that address? Will it be sent to the wallet owner who connects to the internet first? Or to the wallet owner who had this BTC address first?
legendary
Activity: 4536
Merit: 3188
Vile Vixen and Miss Bitcointalk 2021-2023
November 03, 2019, 08:11:41 PM
#3
I know there are a trillion quindecillion different combinations possible with so many characters in an address,
FTFY. (A quindecillion is a trillion trillion trillion trillion.) Don't worry, you were only off by 36 orders of magnitude. Wink

but how do all these wallets make sure no duplicate addresses ever get generated?
They don't. With numbers this large, they don't need to.
legendary
Activity: 2758
Merit: 6830
November 03, 2019, 08:08:30 PM
#2
They don't. These addresses are generated randomly and chances are so damn small that this never happens. Bitcoin is decentralized, so these is no "central point" that shows which address to generate or which ones were already used.

People already discussed this multiple times in the past.

What happens if 2 people generate the same bitcoin wallet address?

This would be called a "collision" and is highly unlikely.

Keys are 256 bit in length and are hashed in a 160 bit address.(2^160th power) Divide it by the world population and you have about 215,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 addresses per capita.(2.15 x 10^38)
newbie
Activity: 20
Merit: 5
November 03, 2019, 07:28:52 PM
#1
Say I open an Electrum wallet, I get BTC addresses belonging to it and they are supposed to be totally unique. But say at the same time another person at the other end of the globe opens an Exodus wallet, who is to say he will not have 1 or more exact same addresses in his new wallet as me?

I know there are a trillion different combinations possible with so many characters in an address, but how do all these wallets make sure no duplicate addresses ever get generated?
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