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Topic: Lost my bitcoin - page 2. (Read 1169 times)

sr. member
Activity: 1148
Merit: 251
December 08, 2017, 02:34:02 AM
#34
I have a friend who also lost his btc due to it was hack his wallet. A victim of phishing attack in his email that is why it is very important to be very careful in saving our details to not put or save it in an email. So sad to hear the story of others.
legendary
Activity: 2646
Merit: 3911
December 08, 2017, 02:32:44 AM
#33
Hello all, I been a long time reader here but have only recently signed up.
I started mining bitcoin in 2015. I saved up and brought 2x second hand s3 antminers and a 1x s1 antminer, I was really interested in the blockchain tech and had to have a piece of the pie.
I mined just over 4btc which had been sitting in my blockchain.info wallet. One day I couldn't access my email due to wrong password, I finally got access back into my email and noticed a few emails had been deleted as well as the one which contained my wallet details, lucky I had a .txt backup. Urgently I log into my wallet and found I had been a robbed, all my btc was gone. My heart sunk, I feel so bummed all that work and money for nothing.

My advice is
Dont keep you wallet details in your email or online at all.
If you have bitcoin dont tell anyone
Use an offline or physical wallet

Dont make the same mistake as me  Sad

sorry, for your lost, we learn from losses.

don’t give upstart again and use hardware wallet.

you have experience and can start again.

thanks for sharing.
sr. member
Activity: 1050
Merit: 269
December 08, 2017, 02:28:47 AM
#32
Sorry for your lost OP, that really was a huge amount now compared to the price when it was in 2015.  This is the first thing I learned about saving Bitcoin. There had been many warnings and alternatives than keeping our BTC in an online wallets.  So the first thing I did was download a light wallet and protect the address with a password.  I also set a back up of private keys just in case my HDD/SSD fails.  I hope that many member here will learn from your experience and thank you for sharing and giving us warning about this kind of stuff.
full member
Activity: 406
Merit: 100
December 08, 2017, 02:23:28 AM
#31
thanks for your advice sir, but it's all back to each other, because the mistake is done by each person because I also
never experienced it ie lost bitcoin in my wallet online even though the amount is not as big as have master ,,
legendary
Activity: 3514
Merit: 1963
Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform
December 08, 2017, 01:46:10 AM
#30
It is NEVER a good idea to store wallet data in online services or cloud storage. We have seen time and time again, how these services are hacked and how people lose their bitcoins. You have to remember one thing, these hackers cannot hack Bitcoin, so they focus all their attention and resources on the weakest link, which is third party service providers that use Bitcoin.

They get easy access to centralised services with poor development and code with a lot of exploits. Nobody has ever lost bitcoins, stored on paper wallets. ^smile^
full member
Activity: 168
Merit: 100
December 08, 2017, 01:25:36 AM
#29
Hello all, I been a long time reader here but have only recently signed up.
I started mining bitcoin in 2015. I saved up and brought 2x second hand s3 antminers and a 1x s1 antminer, I was really interested in the blockchain tech and had to have a piece of the pie.
I mined just over 4btc which had been sitting in my blockchain.info wallet. One day I couldn't access my email due to wrong password, I finally got access back into my email and noticed a few emails had been deleted as well as the one which contained my wallet details, lucky I had a .txt backup. Urgently I log into my wallet and found I had been a robbed, all my btc was gone. My heart sunk, I feel so bummed all that work and money for nothing.

My advice is
Dont keep you wallet details in your email or online at all.
If you have bitcoin dont tell anyone
Use an offline or physical wallet

Dont make the same mistake as me  Sad


It was really unfortunate for you to lost that much bitcoin, this will be one the lesson learned for all of us using bitcoin.
I dont keep my private keys online or in my email, i always back them up offline and i put my bitcoin in an offline wallet for more security.
member
Activity: 393
Merit: 10
Decentralized Gaming Platform - Play & Earn $
December 08, 2017, 01:23:18 AM
#28
for me i only share my password to my wife if anything happen to me she can manage my account.
member
Activity: 64
Merit: 10
December 08, 2017, 01:20:49 AM
#27
I recommend using a secure hardware wallet when you have a large amount of Bitcoins. Also a paper wallet but keep the private key in two separate and secure locations. For example a bank lock box.  You can rent them for a monthly fee in some banks.


I recommend using a secure hardware wallet when you have a large a amount of Bitcoin
member
Activity: 392
Merit: 39
December 08, 2017, 01:20:30 AM
#26
If you must use online wallet (like such as say Block Chain) my advice would be:

1) Sign up with a brand new email address, tell NO ONE of this email address and never use it for anything other than correspondance to your online wallet provider.
2) Ensure both your online bitcoin wallet and email account has extremely long secure passwords
3) Enable 2 factor authentication to your phone and any additional secondary password for sending bitcoins from your online wallet. Again, ensuring that nothing ties your phone number to the email you used to sign up for your wallet by having a brand new one.
4) Keep any computer or mobile device you use to access it clean from malware and viruses, if unsure, dont use it.

I am very sorry the OP lost his money. I concurr that all those points are very important and I want to stress that number 4 is no less! People use their normal phone (a smartphone mostly these days) as a 2FA device. It is wrong! It is very easy to hack a smartphone. People lost their money from a 2FA protected online wallets, too, because of this.

The good practices are the following:
1) I know people who have a dedicated computer for their bank accounts and never use it to browse other web pages. This is a very good practice. Use it for BTC too
2) Also, you may want to buy a very cheap and simple phone and use it ONLY for 2FA just to be able to read text messages with a second factor passphrases. Remember, the simpler the phone, the harder it is to hack it!
3) Or, as the alternative, buy a hardware wallet, it can be used both to secure your bitcoins but it also features a 2FA device. A very secure 2FA, to be sure.

sr. member
Activity: 582
Merit: 250
An Impressive Purely Anonymous Currency.
December 08, 2017, 01:05:15 AM
#25
I recommend using a secure hardware wallet when you have a large amount of Bitcoins. Also a paper wallet but keep the private key in two separate and secure locations. For example a bank lock box.  You can rent them for a monthly fee in some banks.

hero member
Activity: 826
Merit: 518
December 08, 2017, 01:04:00 AM
#24
Hello all, I been a long time reader here but have only recently signed up.
I started mining bitcoin in 2015. I saved up and brought 2x second hand s3 antminers and a 1x s1 antminer, I was really interested in the blockchain tech and had to have a piece of the pie.
I mined just over 4btc which had been sitting in my blockchain.info wallet. One day I couldn't access my email due to wrong password, I finally got access back into my email and noticed a few emails had been deleted as well as the one which contained my wallet details, lucky I had a .txt backup. Urgently I log into my wallet and found I had been a robbed, all my btc was gone. My heart sunk, I feel so bummed all that work and money for nothing.

My advice is
Dont keep you wallet details in your email or online at all.
If you have bitcoin dont tell anyone
Use an offline or physical wallet

Dont make the same mistake as me  Sad

Oh no,it is very hard to digest because 4BTC is really big amount with the current value,but if we are having more than one bitcoins it is better to store it in a hardware wallet and never store your passwords or wallet details into mails or google drive even not in your system just keep it in a pen drive and keep it in a secured place.But don't worry you can make more bitcoins than you lost by working smartly,try to do trading with your mined bitcoins to get extra profit.And try to do altcoin trading which give good profit with less investment then you just but bitcoins with the profit from altcoin mining.
hero member
Activity: 896
Merit: 1008
Free crypto every day here: discord.gg/pXB9nuZ
December 08, 2017, 12:57:55 AM
#23
OP, sorry ti hear that and thanks for your sharing. Currently i still use my email to save my login data to many site. Now, after i hear from you about that i'll move all of that to offline. I'll write that on the paper to make sure all be safe. Once again, thank you very much for sharing your bad experience.
copper member
Activity: 700
Merit: 120
Gamdom
December 08, 2017, 12:51:11 AM
#22
Sorry to hear this news of you.I always suggest people to use a offline hardware wallet.And keep their online wallet password/private key very safely so that they wouldn't face problem.And thanks for your advice
hero member
Activity: 1190
Merit: 534
December 08, 2017, 12:46:22 AM
#21
That's what experienced members are shouting for everyone who is holding their funds online. Even if someone is taking all the security precautions such as 2FA and other safety features, there is a risk of compromisation of the database on the server side.  Thus one should never maintain more than his 5% to 10% holdings on the web wallets or exchanges. Reputed hardware wallet or securely generated paper wallets along with backup is the best option in my opinion.
hero member
Activity: 2170
Merit: 891
Leading Crypto Sports Betting and Casino Platform
December 08, 2017, 12:38:17 AM
#20
Actually, my brother once told me that because he saw me that I'm putting all the details in my email and in other online thing as it's really too dangerous like you can't really tell when they'll attack you. So I deleted it and wrote in a paper, laminated it and keep it in a safe place.
I can't imagine how I'll handle my emotions if my btc will loss in a glimpse of my eye, maybe on one can talk to me or I'll have many sleepless nights
OP, sorry for your loss and hope you can start your journey again.
hero member
Activity: 700
Merit: 500
December 08, 2017, 12:35:20 AM
#19
Hello all, I been a long time reader here but have only recently signed up.
I started mining bitcoin in 2015. I saved up and brought 2x second hand s3 antminers and a 1x s1 antminer, I was really interested in the blockchain tech and had to have a piece of the pie.
I mined just over 4btc which had been sitting in my blockchain.info wallet. One day I couldn't access my email due to wrong password, I finally got access back into my email and noticed a few emails had been deleted as well as the one which contained my wallet details, lucky I had a .txt backup. Urgently I log into my wallet and found I had been a robbed, all my btc was gone. My heart sunk, I feel so bummed all that work and money for nothing.

My advice is
Dont keep you wallet details in your email or online at all.
If you have bitcoin dont tell anyone
Use an offline or physical wallet

Dont make the same mistake as me  Sad

First I would just like to say how I’m very sorry for your loss and thank you for the heads up and advice. THIs is clearly an illustration how even if we get successful on this as long as it is not on our hands it can get lost or disappeared.

Losing our bitcoin is just normal, especially if we are just a newbie and we made a mistake about sending our bitcoin on a certain address that we didn't know accidentally, and what happened to you is like someone hacked your email, well, that happens a lot, I've also experienced that, luckily I've made my actions really quick on retrieving my email password because I know something is fishy, and it would be better if you are going to put 2FA security on your email.
newbie
Activity: 5
Merit: 0
December 08, 2017, 12:19:22 AM
#18
Thanks for sharing your advices with us and so sorry about your lost. Indeed, it's better NOT to save/share our important personal informations online (the lesser we share, the better we are)

PS: What you're going to do with your 2x second hand S3 antminers and 1x S1 antminer? Are you going to start mining Bitcoin again, or you're going to mine other alt coins?

Around June/July I had a massive power surge which unfortunately damaged my miners. I currently have nothing but I think ill save up to buy another miner.
full member
Activity: 714
Merit: 104
December 08, 2017, 12:05:59 AM
#17
I am also have been hacked one time.
If you using online wallet: create one dedicated email for him and set another password. Use old computer only for btc operations, and type site adress manually in adress bar dont search blockchain info on google
member
Activity: 237
Merit: 10
Borderless for People, Frictionless for Banks
December 08, 2017, 12:04:40 AM
#16
it is really sad, you might never get back your bitcoin, we sorry about your lost, and we also learn morething about your experience.
member
Activity: 112
Merit: 10
Young, Dumb & Broke
December 08, 2017, 12:00:08 AM
#15
This is heartbreaking, considering the value of 1 BTC right now. Not to mention the Time and Effort invested on it. I can only lament on your loss. To avoid this kind of scenario in the future, everyone should be vigilant enough. We, ourselves, are the only ones who could protect our own bitcoins because their safety are determined by our own safety practices.
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