Author

Topic: move btc from one computer to another (Read 963 times)

legendary
Activity: 1456
Merit: 1000
May 30, 2015, 11:36:56 PM
#7
Malwarebytes found a bunch of malware, removed them. I'm going to get the paid version now.
Great advice, thanks !!

Your very welcome!  I like using two programs.  Antivirus as long as you stick with name brands that are well known do pretty much the same.

But Malwarebytes just is awesome at finding some of the stuff antivirus might leave.  You will not regret paying for a copy.

Happy mining Smiley
newbie
Activity: 5
Merit: 0
May 30, 2015, 11:04:15 PM
#6
Malwarebytes found a bunch of malware, removed them. I'm going to get the paid version now.
Great advice, thanks !!
legendary
Activity: 1456
Merit: 1000
May 30, 2015, 09:01:53 PM
#5
Awesome, it worked!!

I've been putting this off for over a year, because I was afraid of what I would find out.
Now in order to make my wallet safe (although I have a long password that I hope I remember) how do I make my wallet safe (in general)?

But if they can't guess your password, are you 'safe'?

Make sure you don't have keyloggers running in your system. Doesn't matter if the password is long and complicated if you have malware installed. If you have a large balance, keep it in cold storage. Only keep small amounts you plan to use in a hot wallet. And be careful with what sites you visit and what you install.

It is a good idea scan it with your virus protection of choice.  And also I suggest using malwarebytes to look for malware.  The combination is a good thing.

And on old computer be careful what you do with hardrive don't just throw it out, as it might end up in a recycling center.  At least I would run something such as boot and nuke, and rewrite the crap out of that drive.  And if it was me I would open it up and smash the platters with a hammer.

And store a copy on a usb drive or two.  Just make sure to keep them in safe places. You really want a copy in case of something bad causing lose of computer.
legendary
Activity: 1135
Merit: 1001
May 30, 2015, 07:34:46 PM
#4
Awesome, it worked!!

I've been putting this off for over a year, because I was afraid of what I would find out.
Now in order to make my wallet safe (although I have a long password that I hope I remember) how do I make my wallet safe (in general)?

But if they can't guess your password, are you 'safe'?

Make sure you don't have keyloggers running in your system. Doesn't matter if the password is long and complicated if you have malware installed. If you have a large balance, keep it in cold storage. Only keep small amounts you plan to use in a hot wallet. And be careful with what sites you visit and what you install.
newbie
Activity: 5
Merit: 0
May 30, 2015, 07:27:52 PM
#3
Awesome, it worked!!

I've been putting this off for over a year, because I was afraid of what I would find out.
Now in order to make my wallet safe (although I have a long password that I hope I remember) how do I make my wallet safe (in general)?

But if they can't guess your password, are you 'safe'?
staff
Activity: 3458
Merit: 6793
Just writing some code
May 30, 2015, 06:54:52 PM
#2
I'm moving my balance from old xp computer to my win7 computer. I downloaded QT and it's all synched with the blockchain.
I have my old wallet.dat. Do I replace the wallet.dat in my new win7 computer (with QT shut down) and then restart it?
Thanks for any info.

Yes. Just replace the wallet.dat files. You don't need to restart the computer.
newbie
Activity: 5
Merit: 0
May 30, 2015, 06:40:10 PM
#1
I'm moving my balance from old xp computer to my win7 computer. I downloaded QT and it's all synched with the blockchain.
I have my old wallet.dat. Do I replace the wallet.dat in my new win7 computer (with QT shut down) and then restart it?
Thanks for any info.
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