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Topic: OG Bitcoin Wallet Addresses Suddenly Active - Are they being hacked? (Read 322 times)

hero member
Activity: 1386
Merit: 599
the address of funds of the 6071btc. lead back to a MTGox stash that was seized by authorities. i guess the us gov now wanted to move the coins in preparation to sell them for the liquidation courtcase to pay off the creditors

yep the reason for no movement for 10 years is due to mtgox being in bankruptcy court case for 10 years

This response is on point, thanks for the clarification Frank. I wonder who is going to scoop them up from the US govt
hero member
Activity: 3220
Merit: 678
www.Crypto.Games: Multiple coins, multiple games
It's 100% clickbait headline.

No old wallets are not being hacked. If they were you would be hearing about it. Taking everything else away I would say a lot of them are not moving because of security reasons or financial ones but rather hardware ones. That old PC sitting in the closet that has a few hundred if not thousand BTC (could even be just a few dozen) do you trust it to still boot with no issues? Can that old version of the software even communicate with the network anymore? Has the drive gotten corrupted? Can you fit the entire blockchain on a drive you bought in 2012? And so on.

So you take the time and move the coins.  And possibly sell a couple.

The other reason I see a lot of is people aging out so to speak, if you got into BTC in 2010 and were 40 you are now approaching your mid 50s.
If you have enough time to sell and retire.
Of course it is, otherwise how are you going to get clicks, only by baiting. All in all when there is a huge OG wallet being active and doing something then we are going to get something, I believe that the best thing to do would be having a situation where it will change things if they move and if nothing changes then there is no move, you can understand it from that.

If you saw a huge OG wallet moving things, there will be movements everywhere and you would end up with something that will change it a lot. It will not be simple but at the end of the day we need to wait and see. Since there is no movement with this, that means it was nothing and that is why we should have been focusing a bit more towards real news and not the fake ones.
sr. member
Activity: 658
Merit: 441
The media is always trying to make headlines for themselves. There may be many assumptions for the recent activities in OG's addresses but mass hacking should be the least of them. The OGs are not some newbies that are new to crypto, that lack security awareness and can easily get their wallet comprised by clicking on phishing links or installing compromised apps or software on their devices.

I think the possible reasons for the  recent activity in OG addresses could be some holders moving their funds around, the US government trying to sell some ceased bitcoin or crypto exchanges moving the bitcoin in their cold storage to another address as security measures.
legendary
Activity: 3304
Merit: 1617
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Probably just OG’s moving from one cold storage device to another due to security concerns or sweeping an old paper wallet to move coins.

Just because coins move it doesn’t mean they are being sold. In fact, most commonly it’s just the owner moving coins from one place to another. These stories always cause FUD but there is no reason for it.
sr. member
Activity: 812
Merit: 436
Could it be that folks have figured out how to crack the codes on these old private keys?

Except one leaves his wallet security details open on the internet or to a third party they will not have access to those coins, that's why we must keep our private keys safe, seed phrase as well is not what should be tempered with, someone can't track you down and steal your funds with just the help of public keys, but your seed phrase can make them discover and acquire your coins if left vulnerable.

IF so, they are seeing some massive pay days, EH?

It's not that easy, no one can steal your coins with just the use of public keys, though they can view your account on the blockchain since it's an open distributed ledger but can't alter it, that's why the bitcoin network is secured and trusted.
legendary
Activity: 4424
Merit: 4794
its not a hack. its the US authorities moving around seized mtgox coins. .. gotta pay the lawyers afterall
legendary
Activity: 1932
Merit: 1273
If bruteforcing Bitcoins privatekeys is indeed possible then for sure people would really be flocking away into other altcoins in the market considering that security is really at risks or something have the issue.

That may be possible on a bad implementation of the private key generation, theoretically, if it is possible there is a more significant thing to worry about than moving away to altcoins. What made you think if bitcoin private key cryptographic mechanism is compromised or cracked, the other cryptocurrencies are not also technically vulnerable?

Besides, what is the mere importance of the cryptocurrency market compared to say, the banking system, do you think they are utilizing a more stronger and secure technological technique? I don't think so.
hero member
Activity: 2730
Merit: 632
Recently I was visiting one of my friends who writes code, he brought up this topic to me recently saying that it seems like old wallets are being hacked into, that hackers have targeted older BTC addresses because of their vulnerabilities and lack of security.

I thought that was very interesting and since he is a tech savvy coder his use of relevant jargon and explanation was so good, I just wish I remembered exactly how he put it. I did a quick search though and found this relevant article: https://cryptoslate.com/old-wallets-activate-sparking-fears-of-mass-hack-targeting-bitcoin-veterans/

Could it be that folks have figured out how to crack the codes on these old private keys? IF so, they are seeing some massive pay days, EH?
If bruteforcing Bitcoins privatekeys is indeed possible then for sure people would really be flocking away into other altcoins in the market considering that security is really at risks or something have the issue.
Just like on what others been saying on here that it cant really be that possible that those old wallets could really be hacked. If ever those coins become active once again and made out some
transactions then there's only two things in my mind;

1. Owners had recently found out their keys after a long time of searching
2. Owners had decided for them to snip out some funds or profits on their wallets for a very long time.

I dont really believe that being hacked would really be the case on here on which it is really that something impossible on bruteforcing it out or breaking its security.
Finding a single privatekey on a certain address is impossible.
legendary
Activity: 1722
Merit: 2213
It's 100% clickbait headline.

No old wallets are not being hacked. If they were you would be hearing about it.

Also, if someone had found a vulnerability in old paper wallet generators from 10+ years ago - which is totally possible if the generator wasn't "truly" random generated by mouse point movements or likewise - then you'd find a lot of old coins moving than just a handful. You'd likely see hundreds if not thousands of old accounts waking up right now than a small number basically. Likely with many users claiming this has happened as well as potentially a hacker bragging about it. Whereas if you look at whale shadows (old coins on the move) then there really isn't much activity going on right now.

As Dave said, it's 100% clickbait with no evidence.
legendary
Activity: 3500
Merit: 6320
Crypto Swap Exchange
It's 100% clickbait headline.

No old wallets are not being hacked. If they were you would be hearing about it. Taking everything else away I would say a lot of them are not moving because of security reasons or financial ones but rather hardware ones. That old PC sitting in the closet that has a few hundred if not thousand BTC (could even be just a few dozen) do you trust it to still boot with no issues? Can that old version of the software even communicate with the network anymore? Has the drive gotten corrupted? Can you fit the entire blockchain on a drive you bought in 2012? And so on.

So you take the time and move the coins.  And possibly sell a couple.

The other reason I see a lot of is people aging out so to speak, if you got into BTC in 2010 and were 40 you are now approaching your mid 50s.
If you have enough time to sell and retire.

-Dave
hero member
Activity: 2520
Merit: 783
Recently I was visiting one of my friends who writes code, he brought up this topic to me recently saying that it seems like old wallets are being hacked into, that hackers have targeted older BTC addresses because of their vulnerabilities and lack of security.

I thought that was very interesting and since he is a tech savvy coder his use of relevant jargon and explanation was so good, I just wish I remembered exactly how he put it. I did a quick search though and found this relevant article: https://cryptoslate.com/old-wallets-activate-sparking-fears-of-mass-hack-targeting-bitcoin-veterans/

Could it be that folks have figured out how to crack the codes on these old private keys? IF so, they are seeing some massive pay days, EH?

If there's no news release about those OG wallets for being compromised well maybe there's nothing to worry about it. But if there's fud spreading about those incident where threatining about dumping some large balances then maybe we need to take action since we can ride up the news and earn with. Rather than get bothered and get stress for possible scenario that might happen. For now just think that the wallet owner of that wallet is maybe checking if his bitcoins still intact on his wallet.
sr. member
Activity: 1078
Merit: 342
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It seems highly unlikely that the wallet was hacked. My guess is that the wallet owner simply decided to transfer their bitcoins to a more secure and safe wallet after waking up. As we are aware the seed phrase is currently impossible to crack with the most advanced hardware available today.

It's strange that in situations like this, people tend to jump to the conclusion that the bitcoins were hacked rather than considering the possibility that they were simply transferred to another wallet by the genuine owner. It could be due to a lack of understanding or trust in the security of bitcoin technology?
sr. member
Activity: 1624
Merit: 315
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MtGox aside, why can't people just make the assumption that maybe, just maybe, that OG bitcoin holders just want to move their funds? Why does it always have to be something very bombastic like a mass hacking?

I know right, it would be impossible to steal a private key especially to an anonymous wallet. I think that's the case if you are one of the OG bitcoin holders you're like a celebrity in every action you take. Like just moving your funds suddenly you have an thread/article about it lmao. They are considered OG so it they know how to handle their funds that wouldn't be open to hacking.
legendary
Activity: 2912
Merit: 6403
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I did a quick search though and found this relevant article: https://cryptoslate.com/old-wallets-activate-sparking-fears-of-mass-hack-targeting-bitcoin-veterans/

Could it be that folks have figured out how to crack the codes on these old private keys? IF so, they are seeing some massive pay days, EH?

Whale alert...d'oh!

So first transaction mentioned would be this:
https://mempool.space/tx/bb40bc71a6c551ef2c3b767094e2225685a8f690877edc6bb97b33035e65d866
what hacker withdraws 400 BTC and leaves the other 600 BTC in the compromised address?

Second one:
https://mempool.space/tx/859878cbe79f7cd4a2be5d4c5e2f80bbe5230a1e33ed3b0318b75288acbf721f
So the hackers decided to take only 6071 coins and leave there coins worth $108,448,000!

Do this sound to you like some "hacks" happening?



legendary
Activity: 1932
Merit: 1273
Fear sells. It is funny how the articles cite unrelated unknown and uncertain EVM-coins issues. And especially only citing the Bitcoin community concerns, solely on Twitter.

Mass hacks targeting veterans? Where is the other transaction source or information? the article only cites two dormant addresses. The next step for this kind of journalism is to rehash the news into sentiments like, look how tremendous Bitcoin investors' profits are and such kind of things. Fear leads a click, and a piece of bombastic news will follow as a rehashed version.
legendary
Activity: 3234
Merit: 5637
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When I see a Senior member asking about such things, I wonder what these people were doing on the forum all that time and why they didn't learn some basics... Although what else can you expect from someone who goes to the gym and meets people there who know all the world's secrets Roll Eyes

I just checked my old wallet addresses and no one hacked them, am I the only one or are there others who haven't been hacked? Shocked
sr. member
Activity: 728
Merit: 421
OP, I really do not give in to this you have said. If there are recent old hacked wallets I believe the owners would definitely come up publicly to say something about it so as to make something out of it. If not necessarily engaging tech guru to help them recover their assets,  maybe a proper investigation to unravelling the identities behind the hack. Some would even turn it into a process to gain attention and recognition as early adopters of bitcoin you know how it feels then telling someone you were amongst the early adopters of bitcoin that is a catchy one you know.

Back to the reality,  hacking a wallet is not as easy as you think one must have clues of your keys if not in full some hint can gain them access but in this situation none of it is the case so how do you think it is possible. Let me run down to CEX hack as an illustration, do you think CEX exchange hack is just let alone a hacker, I believe there are always information leak before such could happen likewise private wallets too.

Let me remind you as well, do not forget that some of those accounts holders are tech gurus as well and they too are good at their games so tell me how do you explain that when you are sophisticated to protect your own. Some of the hacks claimed to have occurred on old 1st generational bitcoin wallets are not what we think some are just a change of wallet. Maybe the owners just felt like changing asset location to another current trending one to be on the safe side.
Of lately there have not been any complaint on private wallet hack rather it is coming from CEX so this justifies it that most old private wallets holding bitcoin safe or possibly change of assets location are not hack.
jr. member
Activity: 56
Merit: 26
Sure, people are losing millions all of a sudden and nobody says a thing. They’re all quiet while hackers do their job. Say this was possible MAYBE with a single “OG” address someone found by complete luck (and even that’s almost impossible). But multiple? Unless there was a huge flaw nobody’s found yet or something like that, no way. And again, why would owners of these addresses be quiet about losing millions to “hackers”?
legendary
Activity: 2268
Merit: 18771
What a bunch of absolute clickbait nonsense. Claiming that all 12 and 24 word seed phrases are vulnerable!? I'm sorry, has someone managed to break the laws of thermodynamics and create a colossal amount of energy out of nothing in order to start cracking 2128 bit seed phrases? Are the oceans boiling from the heat this energy is turning in to? Because that's legitimately what would happen if we used enough energy to successfully start brute forcing seed phrases. And lets not even mention the fact that seed phrases didn't even exist when most of these old addresses were funded for the first time.

An absolute trash article, but sadly what comes to pass for "news" in the crypto world. Just like that article a couple of weeks ago that claimed seed phrases are vulnerable because someone posted all their words online and then their coins were stolen. Roll Eyes
hero member
Activity: 616
Merit: 749
Could it be that folks have figured out how to crack the codes on these old private keys? IF so, they are seeing some massive pay days, EH?

It's unlikely as this should have caused a panic in the community already if the story was true and would had made Bitcoin price to drop. For now this are just assumptions and has not been proven untill few people affected can come out to confirm the news of their wallets been hacked. Maybe the OGs are just moving their Bitcoin to a hardware wallets or other more secure wallets.

It could be they're selling some amount of the Bitcoin they bought in the past. Private keys are impossible to be hacked into, there hasn't been a news to confirm that any hacker has successfully hacked a private key. If the OGs accounts are been hacked into, no wallet is safe.
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