Author

Topic: Blockchain.info Backup (Read 168 times)

jr. member
Activity: 101
Merit: 4
July 28, 2024, 07:46:26 AM
#8
I can help you get back your password 100% safe.
legendary
Activity: 2534
Merit: 6080
Self-proclaimed Genius
June 25, 2024, 11:23:18 PM
#7
-snip-
I used the link to restore it: https://login.blockchain.com/wallet/import-wallet

But my old password is not accepted (I think I changed it later)
So the backup isn't unencrypted like you claimed, that could've easily deduced if you mentioned the backup's file name.
Note: The "aes" between wallet and the extension indicates that its payload is encrypted.

Do you have a backup of your account recovery phrase? (various number of words)
That can recover your password and wallet ID, here: https://login.blockchain.com/wallet/forgot-password (do not paste new 12-word BIP39 seed phrase)

If you don't have, you must remember a large portion of the password that you've used so bruteforce would be possible.
In that case, try BTCRecover: https://github.com/3rdIteration/btcrecover
Refer to the link in the reply above for the documentation.

If you do not have the resources and/nor technical skills to do that, you may consider using Dave's "walletrecoveryservices".
Only use the contacts in the official site and do not accept any PM/email who claims that they are affiliated.
link: https://www.walletrecoveryservices.com/

Quote from: chokri29
My request is can i get something from the 1.7B backup file?!
Only if you know the password. Otherwise, that payload will stay encrypted.
legendary
Activity: 2352
Merit: 6089
bitcoindata.science
June 25, 2024, 12:28:50 PM
#6
I created this blockchain.info wallet in 2013, used it for about 5 years and then neglected it. Now want it back, so I looked for the backup and found it in my email https://i.postimg.cc/ZYPhqHfM/Screenshot-20240625-103859.jpg



I used the link to restore it: https://login.blockchain.com/wallet/import-wallet

But my old password is not accepted (I think I changed it later)

I found two types of backup files:
 1/ Wallet.aes.json 648B (with password)
 2/wallet.aes.json 1.7B (

My request is can i get something from the 1.7B backup file?!

Quoting images to make them visible.

Indeed this is a wallet.aes.json file, as I mentioned earlier.

Have you tried here? You can drop your wallet.aes.json file here

https://login.blockchain.com/wallet/import-wallet





I never recovered such files. If you are having problems, this might be an alternative

But try the blockchain.com link first.

I discovered fhis website which looks legit as there are references of it in bitcoin stack exchange
https://btcrecover.readthedocs.io/en/latest/Usage_Examples/2020-05-08_Recovering_Blockchain_Wallet_Passwords/Example_Recovering_Blockchain_Wallet_Passwords/


newbie
Activity: 44
Merit: 0
June 25, 2024, 09:58:35 AM
#5
I have a Blockchain.info backup (json file without password) i opened in chrome browser, it looks like this:
That doesn't look like "json", more like the "base64" encoded payload.

Theoretically, if it's not encrypted (wallet.json), opening it with any text editor is enough to see the private keys in bare base58 format next to every "priv:" lines.
Since you claimed that there's no password, decoding that base64 string should result with readable text containing the data I mentioned including master keys if the wallet is HD.

You said "I Have", but didn't mentioned where you got it from.
Is it from someone that claimed that it's a blockchain(dot)info backup or you downloaded it from the wallet yourself?


I created this blockchain.info wallet in 2013, used it for about 5 years and then neglected it. Now want it back, so I looked for the backup and found it in my email https://i.postimg.cc/ZYPhqHfM/Screenshot-20240625-103859.jpg

https://i.postimg.cc/PxTmFXdC/Polish-20240625-191306092.png

I used the link to restore it: https://login.blockchain.com/wallet/import-wallet

But my old password is not accepted (I think I changed it later)

I found two types of backup files:
 1/ Wallet.aes.json 648B (with password)
 2/wallet.aes.json 1.7B (https://i.postimg.cc/MZsydJNG/Polish-20240625-191232234.png)

My request is can i get something from the 1.7B backup file?!
legendary
Activity: 2352
Merit: 6089
bitcoindata.science
June 25, 2024, 09:04:38 AM
#4
I have a Blockchain.info backup (json file without password) i opened in chrome browser, it looks like this:
That doesn't look like "json", more like the "base64" encoded payload.

Theoretically, if it's not encrypted (wallet.json), opening it with any text editor is enough to see the private keys in bare base58 format next to every "priv:" lines.
Since you claimed that there's no password, decoding that base64 string should result with readable text containing the data I mentioned including master keys if the wallet is HD.

You said "I Have", but didn't mentioned where you got it from.
Is it from someone that claimed that it's a blockchain(dot)info backup or you downloaded it from the wallet yourself?

According to this post is stack exchange, wallet.aes.json may have this kind of data

Quote
https://bitcoin.stackexchange.com/questions/115557/what-is-the-correct-format-for-wallet-aes-json

It seems Blockchain.info / blockchain.com's custodial wallets have used several different formats.
In the github repository for btcrecover you can find some example wallets used for testing. These are in the btcrecover/test/test-wallets/ folder
...


blockchain-v0.0-wallet.aes.json looks like base58 encoded data:

Code:
5gMPxas8l5M1oCc7ss7tiPWfctSeunHmCpK18tdZh0dsaWQFLXbFV97qEG/v4Rvb
pY4NMv1UJNgm8e6G9UH6bM3H0LoDRct3itduKOyn7kjiulhLCROaKlg/0Xt442v7
t1VfbySy/vjq6sMGYT9BYkwtWfMclFkisz0G/PciNIozNkeMrUVI+0bEFJSn+JyY
qTJ3ROwSvIs8lWFpE0PGUz0sHz9Eltysz5Xw5aIXxdl/9c3zo7cx4mjoSFZGTc11
PL9F4A8Oi/ybV1ud6BbLvV9K08bRwPNPijvAzmKop02gVeLHLAKF4zopnvV7nvnQ
bolHE6u2HZ9LUVfDSCSLY16ZxGQ7YhBSXp+sLd4zNNiD4u4WfACN5hc+WvdT1kJZ
6veCxUrOt8CHPmNldzWyibCaLh+aOTQjFdo2Qo0UCsZmK7lM2nDnv6TYuP+PhdGp
ymPmKgLWiRwpTqBc88no7VqEAuQcdmUPuMENWkTKj1SbLqkvEl6EWMf8jE+IE1wI
uMtAdVSTsxiAXE0pOdo0icul9KLm1L7WTVtU9W3zaSn9dHl2YVDoMLITpryFrM/9
O4UXdG8UcAkuY0xisGhoLND/AVsJ8NUgpPmdFx5XyEfFSzOuqobeNMQT9wB9iAIs
Z5t0svVXBvZH/XmVhBGvkE+VdLnXxiKEjOT+RpD3lXaf4SRXIWDZGWdF9f4aNKkn
06ULGwB/+4P2NhqfUkEcwsZ9A5NqBRDVgzBY69S85c5LUTod8m+lUp7G6AVQ1zO4
TXSB258825QKNnZtx6X/1IaE/Xv8kV2IVCoCeQxOam2nGIk3EvojEfPHIr2Ysr4l
cPXcV7yTayDvWov5gvYQB5sem68SrgPGncFDLX+UFURnLTod+GwcdB6VsvL3lrp+
3+LtmKIEBIEVijuas5zL3g==

So probably op has this wallet.aes.json
hero member
Activity: 1442
Merit: 775
June 25, 2024, 05:24:56 AM
#3
I have a Blockchain.info backup (json file without password) i opened in chrome browser, it looks like this:
Do you have access to the email used to register that wallet?
https://login.blockchain.com/#/reminder

Guides and videos on brute force your wallet password.
https://btcrecover.readthedocs.io/en/latest/Usage_Examples/2020-05-08_Recovering_Blockchain_Wallet_Passwords/Example_Recovering_Blockchain_Wallet_Passwords/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f63FpoTKwSw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rMtW8vIHHek

Lastly try this service https://walletrecoveryservices.com/
legendary
Activity: 2534
Merit: 6080
Self-proclaimed Genius
June 24, 2024, 11:42:45 PM
#2
I have a Blockchain.info backup (json file without password) i opened in chrome browser, it looks like this:
That doesn't look like "json", more like the "base64" encoded payload.

Theoretically, if it's not encrypted (wallet.json), opening it with any text editor is enough to see the private keys in bare base58 format next to every "priv:" lines.
Since you claimed that there's no password, decoding that base64 string should result with readable text containing the data I mentioned including master keys if the wallet is HD.

You said "I Have", but didn't mentioned where you got it from.
Is it from someone that claimed that it's a blockchain(dot)info backup or you downloaded it from the wallet yourself?
newbie
Activity: 44
Merit: 0
June 24, 2024, 04:52:39 PM
#1
I have a Blockchain.info backup (json file without password) i opened in chrome browser, it looks like this:

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

How to identify the private key??!
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