Pages:
Author

Topic: OVERVIEW: BITCOIN HARDWARE WALLETS █████████████████ Secure your Coins - page 5. (Read 122191 times)

legendary
Activity: 1148
Merit: 1011
In Satoshi I Trust
legendary
Activity: 1148
Merit: 1011
In Satoshi I Trust
legendary
Activity: 1148
Merit: 1011
In Satoshi I Trust
newbie
Activity: 31
Merit: 0
Just added first full BitLox Bitcoin Hardware Wallet Review. Hope you find it useful.

I'd like to post this additional info: this week the BitLox team will be uploading & open sourcing our apps (Chrome/Web/iOS/Android) that interface with this hardware wallet.

Sorry to quote myself, but there is relevance!

We've uploaded the source code for all the BitLox applications (the apps that talk to the device and the blockchain)

Check it out here:

https://github.com/BitLox
legendary
Activity: 1512
Merit: 1009
Only now realised this thread does not have reviews made around here and some others...

Trezor
KeepKey 1, 2, 3, 4
Ledger Nano
newbie
Activity: 31
Merit: 0
Just added first full BitLox Bitcoin Hardware Wallet Review. Hope you find it useful.

I'd like to post this additional info: this week the BitLox team will be uploading & open sourcing our apps (Chrome/Web/iOS/Android) that interface with this hardware wallet.
hero member
Activity: 623
Merit: 500
CTO, Ledger
Not disagreeing that the addition of a passphrase would increase security.  That would be awesome.

also I'm not adding a passphrase because that would have to be done in a non interoperable way - PBKDF2 is just too slow to run on an 8 bits CPU operating around 10 MHz. It would be indeed trivial to just have a 3DES typically. If people feel like that could fit a new BIP it's a different story.

However, you could say that the Ledger Nano does not "need" the passphrase as much as the Trezor does.    Trezor stores the mnemonic in plain text on a generic open-source microcontroller, so it is more susceptible to hardware attack vectors than the way Ledger Nano stores its seed--the closed-source smartcard element.  The latter would require infinitely more resources to crack--or reveal existence of a backdoor)--which, considering the widespread use of it in the banking sector, would be prohibitively expensive for such an attack.

yes, that's exactly the reason why I'm not pushing that option too much. It should be mandatory if you store a secret on a generic microcontroller, especially if that secret is complicated to revoke - typically what's acceptable for Bitcoin is not fine for remote authentication
full member
Activity: 133
Merit: 100
I've just ordered my first hardware wallet, I went for the Ledger Nano. Hopefully it arrives next week  Smiley

You'll probably like it.  It seems to be a good product at the right price.  So far I have not had problems with it.

It works, and the price is right.  What more would I, a simple man, really want?

A wallet with passphrase support? That way if your seed is stolen your bitcoins are still safe ... as long as you do not forget your passphrase of course:) Even using a simple passphrase adds a significant security layer to your hardware wallet. AFAIK the only hardware wallets that allow you to protect a wallet with a passphrase are Trezor and BitLox.

Not disagreeing that the addition of a passphrase would increase security.  That would be awesome.

However, you could say that the Ledger Nano does not "need" the passphrase as much as the Trezor does.    Trezor stores the mnemonic in plain text on a generic open-source microcontroller, so it is more susceptible to hardware attack vectors than the way Ledger Nano stores its seed--the closed-source smartcard element.  The latter would require infinitely more resources to crack--or reveal existence of a backdoor)--which, considering the widespread use of it in the banking sector, would be prohibitively expensive for such an attack.
legendary
Activity: 1806
Merit: 1164
I've just ordered my first hardware wallet, I went for the Ledger Nano. Hopefully it arrives next week  Smiley

You'll probably like it.  It seems to be a good product at the right price.  So far I have not had problems with it.

It works, and the price is right.  What more would I, a simple man, really want?

A wallet with passphrase support? That way if your seed is stolen your bitcoins are still safe ... as long as you do not forget your passphrase of course:) Even using a simple passphrase adds a significant security layer to your hardware wallet. AFAIK the only hardware wallets that allow you to protect a wallet with a passphrase are Trezor and BitLox.
legendary
Activity: 2912
Merit: 1852
I've just ordered my first hardware wallet, I went for the Ledger Nano. Hopefully it arrives next week  Smiley


You'll probably like it.  It seems to be a good product at the right price.  So far I have not had problems with it.

It works, and the price is right.  What more would I, a simple man, really want?
sr. member
Activity: 334
Merit: 250
I've just ordered my first hardware wallet, I went for the Ledger Nano. Hopefully it arrives next week  Smiley
legendary
Activity: 1806
Merit: 1164
legendary
Activity: 1148
Merit: 1011
In Satoshi I Trust
legendary
Activity: 1148
Merit: 1011
In Satoshi I Trust
legendary
Activity: 1806
Merit: 1164
Having wallet passphrases means you can carry the Trezor around with you and not worry about losing it, or even getting held at gunpoint because you can give them dummy/low-balance wallet passphrases while the thief will be completely unaware of your large-balance wallet.
Does Tresor allow 2 seeds/passphrases, one for dummy/low-balance and another for large-balance wallets?

Trezor only has one seed that all wallets and addresses are derived from. You can set up more than one passphrase protected wallet. Trezor talks about this use case here.
legendary
Activity: 3431
Merit: 1233
Having wallet passphrases means you can carry the Trezor around with you and not worry about losing it, or even getting held at gunpoint because you can give them dummy/low-balance wallet passphrases while the thief will be completely unaware of your large-balance wallet.
Does Tresor allow 2 seeds/passphrases, one for dummy/low-balance and another for large-balance wallets?
full member
Activity: 133
Merit: 100
With a Trezor you can use a simple passphrase you can remember and if a thief discovers your seed he would not be able to steal any bitcoin stored in your passphrase protected wallet (if you have a few bitcoin not protected by the passphrase they would be at risk.) Trezor devs really produced a well designed product with just about every option you could ask for.
I don't see the difference. You have to protect your seed in the same way you protect your passphrase.

The Trezor stores the mnemonics in plain text on a generic microcontroller.   If someone steals the Trezor, it could be possible to use physical hacking techniques to get the mnemonic out of it, thus bypassing the PIN protection.   In that case, all wallets created from those mnemonics would be stolen.

But if you create a wallet based on the mnemonics inside the Trezor PLUS a passphrase, then it would be impossible for the person in physical possession of the device to steal your money without the passphrase for that particular wallet.

Having wallet passphrases means you can carry the Trezor around with you and not worry about losing it, or even getting held at gunpoint because you can give them dummy/low-balance wallet passphrases while the thief will be completely unaware of your large-balance wallet.
legendary
Activity: 1806
Merit: 1164
With a Trezor you can use a simple passphrase you can remember and if a thief discovers your seed he would not be able to steal any bitcoin stored in your passphrase protected wallet (if you have a few bitcoin not protected by the passphrase they would be at risk.) Trezor devs really produced a well designed product with just about every option you could ask for.
I don't see the difference. You have to protect your seed in the same way you protect your passphrase.

When you initialize your Trezor you are given your seed of course. When you use your Trezor if you do not create a passphrase protected wallet all your bitcoin could be stolen if a thief gets your seed. You have the option in Trezor to create passphrase protected wallets that only show up in myTrezor.com if you enter your passphrase after the PIN.

A thief who gets your seed but not your passphrase will never be able to access the passphrase protected wallet. Do you own a Trezor? If not take a look at the user manual advanced settings for more info.

Pages:
Jump to: