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Topic: bitcoincrack.org review (all bitcoin private keys) (Read 955 times)

hero member
Activity: 952
Merit: 513
Haha, what is that site? It looks like one of those scammy sites, but it's not really one, it's just a massive waste of time.

I believe the site is looking for private keys and most of the ones they've found so far have 0 funds in them, and then you can download it for yourself and use your own computing power to find empty addresses? It's just a massive waste of time, in the entire time BTC has been around, I don't think anyone has ever gotten funds this way, it's more unlikely than winning the lottery.

Please don't waste your time on something like this, really not worth it.
jr. member
Activity: 56
Merit: 3
i was using this site (http://bitcoincrack.org) to check all bitcoin private keys using software downloadable from the site.

i check it now after long time, and i see it's updated and now works online without any software..

anyone used this site before?
and how is possible to get used wallet address while it checks 15 addresses per second?
5 engines detected this file Cry
https://www.virustotal.com/gui/file/a6dec23e157aecefdeb06a0fccc1511f760910d5b57e215ef7fdde8589873ee0/detection
hero member
Activity: 2352
Merit: 905
Metawin.com - Truly the best casino ever
Being curios, I tried this website, fortunately I got a wallet with some money inside 1GTkWKMr8d71qf1DiA7HLHzi7SSATRVNa7 with a corresponding masked private key, but its likely a scam, they were asking me to pay 0.01btc to unlock the masked private key. The question is why would they give another person the private key to a wallet worth millions of dollars? even if they are running a charity organization I recon they cannot be that generous except they have some multi billion somewhere. To worsen the scam, why would someone that want to give out millions of dollars be requesting for 0.01BTC for website maintenance ? Interesting to know these scams still exist in these forms.
Glad at least someone recognised it. Somehow people don't have enough brain cells to realize that why the hell will someone give you adress with $$$ and only request 0.01 btc from you. And why don't they work for therselves? They are as benevolent as cloud mining companies.
And also: People mustn't open threads on scam websites.
legendary
Activity: 3080
Merit: 1353

Same here LOL http://bitcoincrack.org/unlock.php?address=1FhM1NVhR5W1NgzbK8Tvr755f9BGckX4pq

Asking 0.01 payment for 223BTC in wallet Cheesy

Sadly I guess people are stupid enough to react on such scams. I mean first thing they should ask themselves is why the owner of the website haven't picked the coins but is hiding "saving them for you to pick up" after you send him the money. I really feel sorry for people who pay...

I don't feel sorry for them, it's the price they are paying for being naive and/or stupid but I'm surprised how after all this time such things are working and are able to attract more and more victims. How easy it's for scamers to make the mony and they don't even need to try hard.
Will people ever learn something from their mistakes?

Well sometimes its a expensive lessons to learn that there are a lot of scammers out there promising you good returns but it turns out they're laughing their ass withdrawing the bitcoin these guys send because they fall for their trap. As far as cracking the wallet with 223 BTC, all I can say is good luck to them. I also suggest to go visit this thread: https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/100-ways-to-earn-bitcoin-1777912 - 100 Ways To Earn Bitcoin, instead of wasting their effort, electricity and computing power into something that is impossible.
legendary
Activity: 2912
Merit: 1068
WOLF.BET - Provably Fair Crypto Casino

Same here LOL http://bitcoincrack.org/unlock.php?address=1FhM1NVhR5W1NgzbK8Tvr755f9BGckX4pq

Asking 0.01 payment for 223BTC in wallet Cheesy

Sadly I guess people are stupid enough to react on such scams. I mean first thing they should ask themselves is why the owner of the website haven't picked the coins but is hiding "saving them for you to pick up" after you send him the money. I really feel sorry for people who pay...

I don't feel sorry for them, it's the price they are paying for being naive and/or stupid but I'm surprised how after all this time such things are working and are able to attract more and more victims. How easy it's for scamers to make the mony and they don't even need to try hard.
Will people ever learn something from their mistakes?
legendary
Activity: 1498
Merit: 1117
Same here LOL http://bitcoincrack.org/unlock.php?address=1FhM1NVhR5W1NgzbK8Tvr755f9BGckX4pq

Asking 0.01 payment for 223BTC in wallet Cheesy
Looks like someone already donated the BTC0.01. Yikes.
2 people donated 0.01 lol and the BTC223 still on that address. If this real, the balance should be moved to another address.

this is not real. it just like all the spam in twitter. the postings that tell you to send an amount of X and receive back x*100. I hope that the creators of this this site payed more than the were able to receive from some newbies.
sr. member
Activity: 1218
Merit: 410
Same here LOL http://bitcoincrack.org/unlock.php?address=1FhM1NVhR5W1NgzbK8Tvr755f9BGckX4pq

Asking 0.01 payment for 223BTC in wallet Cheesy
Looks like someone already donated the BTC0.01. Yikes.
2 people donated 0.01 lol and the BTC223 still on that address. If this real, the balance should be moved to another address.
mk4
legendary
Activity: 2870
Merit: 3873
📟 t3rminal.xyz
Just a scammy version of directory.io; sure, sites like directory.io do work, theoretically; it's just that you'd already be dead by the time you actually land on a private key that has an amount on it.

Same here LOL http://bitcoincrack.org/unlock.php?address=1FhM1NVhR5W1NgzbK8Tvr755f9BGckX4pq

Asking 0.01 payment for 223BTC in wallet Cheesy
Looks like someone already donated the BTC0.01. Yikes.
hero member
Activity: 2786
Merit: 902
yesssir! 🫡
Waste of time if you want to use it for legit purposes. But I can hardly think of a scam employing this scheme, where is the potential profit? Traffic? It won't be much/ Something else? I'm puzzled.
The profit part is where they claim to "sell" the private key of an address containing 223 BTC for 0.01BTC (or any other address containing BTC if one is found). Doesn't seem to be much else on the page besides that. I hope people don't fall for scams like this, but some people must've gotten scammed already by this.

LOL really? I mean, would anyone be so dumb to believe they will be given, say, 223 BTC if they pay 0.01? This is even dumber than Nigerian scams Smiley

You may find it hard to believe but there are definitely people like that out there. Take a look at the news or search on the internet---or here on forum, people falling for obvious scams are not that rare.
member
Activity: 280
Merit: 28
Waste of time if you want to use it for legit purposes. But I can hardly think of a scam employing this scheme, where is the potential profit? Traffic? It won't be much/ Something else? I'm puzzled.
The profit part is where they claim to "sell" the private key of an address containing 223 BTC for 0.01BTC (or any other address containing BTC if one is found). Doesn't seem to be much else on the page besides that. I hope people don't fall for scams like this, but some people must've gotten scammed already by this.

LOL really? I mean, would anyone be so dumb to believe they will be given, say, 223 BTC if they pay 0.01? This is even dumber than Nigerian scams Smiley
legendary
Activity: 1624
Merit: 1130
Bitcoin FTW!
Waste of time if you want to use it for legit purposes. But I can hardly think of a scam employing this scheme, where is the potential profit? Traffic? It won't be much/ Something else? I'm puzzled.
The profit part is where they claim to "sell" the private key of an address containing 223 BTC for 0.01BTC (or any other address containing BTC if one is found). Doesn't seem to be much else on the page besides that. I hope people don't fall for scams like this, but some people must've gotten scammed already by this.

If anyone's worrying about their coins being stolen by some sort of project like this, it's mathematically almost impossible as of right now. As I said earlier, the only addresses that have been actually cracked are purposely made to be cracked or wallets that have been generated with bad RNG/ some other error in generation. In 99.9% of cases you should be fine. It's not a bad idea to spread out your coins over multiple wallets, still. Never good to keep all your eggs in one basket.
member
Activity: 280
Merit: 28
Waste of time if you want to use it for legit purposes. But I can hardly think of a scam employing this scheme, where is the potential profit? Traffic? It won't be much/ Something else? I'm puzzled.
legendary
Activity: 2604
Merit: 3056
Welt Am Draht
i was using this site (http://bitcoincrack.org) to check all bitcoin private keys using software downloadable from the site.

i check it now after long time, and i see it's updated and now works online without any software..

anyone used this site before?
and how is possible to get used wallet address while it checks 15 addresses per second?

So you want to steal someone else's coins. Is that really the type of admission you should be making on a site of this nature? Best of luck with your search. Come back to us in a few trillion years and let us know how you got on.
hero member
Activity: 1666
Merit: 753
i was using this site (http://bitcoincrack.org) to check all bitcoin private keys using software downloadable from the site.

i check it now after long time, and i see it's updated and now works online without any software..

anyone used this site before?
and how is possible to get used wallet address while it checks 15 addresses per second?

This isn't any different to just generating a new address on bitaddress.org, or whatever.

The chances of finding an address with any kind of usage history are extremely low, let alone finding an address with a balance. It's extremely improbable that you'll ever find such a collision. It does seem like a copy of directory.io.

Both sites are quite misleading, because you're pretty much just wasting your computing power refreshing that site all the time. If such loopholes do actually exist (which they do not), then the bitcoin network wouldn't be considered as secure as it is.
legendary
Activity: 1526
Merit: 1179
I really feel sorry for people who pay...
You shouldn't. If you get rewarded for stupidity, you'll be thinking it's the right thing to do, but if you find yourself lose money on utter nonsense, you'll blame yourself for being so stupid, which is an important life lesson.

After one or two times you know what to avoid. People who keep falling for this nonsense endlessly are mentally challenged. In that case they need to be protected against themselves.

Most importantly, let's assume you manage to 'find' a private key with a certain amount of Bitcoin value, it's not even yours. If you take these coins then it's the same as straight theft, and thus a criminal act.
member
Activity: 238
Merit: 38

Same here LOL http://bitcoincrack.org/unlock.php?address=1FhM1NVhR5W1NgzbK8Tvr755f9BGckX4pq

Asking 0.01 payment for 223BTC in wallet Cheesy

Sadly I guess people are stupid enough to react on such scams. I mean first thing they should ask themselves is why the owner of the website haven't picked the coins but is hiding "saving them for you to pick up" after you send him the money. I really feel sorry for people who pay...
newbie
Activity: 104
Merit: 0
Being curios, I tried this website, fortunately I got a wallet with some money inside 1GTkWKMr8d71qf1DiA7HLHzi7SSATRVNa7 with a corresponding masked private key, but its likely a scam, they were asking me to pay 0.01btc to unlock the masked private key. The question is why would they give another person the private key to a wallet worth millions of dollars? even if they are running a charity organization I recon they cannot be that generous except they have some multi billion somewhere. To worsen the scam, why would someone that want to give out millions of dollars be requesting for 0.01BTC for website maintenance ? Interesting to know these scams still exist in these forms.

Same here LOL http://bitcoincrack.org/unlock.php?address=1FhM1NVhR5W1NgzbK8Tvr755f9BGckX4pq

Asking 0.01 payment for 223BTC in wallet Cheesy
copper member
Activity: 224
Merit: 3
Being curios, I tried this website, fortunately I got a wallet with some money inside 1GTkWKMr8d71qf1DiA7HLHzi7SSATRVNa7 with a corresponding masked private key, but its likely a scam, they were asking me to pay 0.01btc to unlock the masked private key. The question is why would they give another person the private key to a wallet worth millions of dollars? even if they are running a charity organization I recon they cannot be that generous except they have some multi billion somewhere. To worsen the scam, why would someone that want to give out millions of dollars be requesting for 0.01BTC for website maintenance ? Interesting to know these scams still exist in these forms.
member
Activity: 320
Merit: 18
Basically to write some small program that is going to generate addresses and see if they have funds in them is not some super hard task to do. But you obviously have some concerns regarding this and thus you clearly dn't understand the principle of bitcoin security and many other alts security as well.Will advise you to watch this video as it really explains this well and this is one of the first videos I watched when I was understanding bitcoin : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I1uefzJJ6nM&pbjreload=10

thanks for your video, i'm watching it now
member
Activity: 238
Merit: 38
Basically to write some small program that is going to generate addresses and see if they have funds in them is not some super hard task to do. But you obviously have some concerns regarding this and thus you clearly dn't understand the principle of bitcoin security and many other alts security as well.Will advise you to watch this video as it really explains this well and this is one of the first videos I watched when I was understanding bitcoin : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I1uefzJJ6nM&pbjreload=10
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