Author

Topic: Recover Paper Wallet (Read 445 times)

jr. member
Activity: 32
Merit: 8
February 17, 2021, 09:42:45 PM
#27

What tells you I was going to steal your BTC? I only wanted to help you and that's what I get as a response? Ok, fine, but you could of simply replied to my PM and refuse.

Yeah, sorry. What was I thinking? Just post your bank info and username and password and I'll drop a couple bucks in as an heartfelt apology.[/FONT
member
Activity: 120
Merit: 63
February 17, 2021, 08:51:17 PM
#26
Haha, no, it's not my site. I simply plugged their receiving addresses in to block explorers for the relevant coins you mentioned (BTC, ETH, and LTC), looking for an incoming transaction made around the same time as your last post for roughly the correct value. Everything on most blockchains is completely public. Knowing an address is all that is needed to look at all transactions involving that address.

I wasn't aware Mozilla were offering a VPN, but on closer inspection it runs on the Mullvad VPN network, which is one of those recommended by privacytools.io. Do they accept bitcoin payments?

Yes, I knew that most crypto transactions were publicly viewable, I just thought it would be a little harder and ambiguous to pick out any specific transaction. I have no idea if they accept crypto, I opted to pay with my AmEx since it will be considered a business expense for my taxes.

As far as the "take a pic" guy, I really didn't think there would be some draconian punishment meted out, I just wanted to let people here see what a board member was willing to do to steal from someone they thought was unaware. While I was at a loss to know how to get the coin back into the wild, I knew better than to pass a pic along. Others might not be so informed or aware. I thought it was important the movers and shakers and the helpful on the board were made aware of a douche in their midst. I know I will make it a point to warn others of "take a pic" douche if I see him on the board.



What tells you I was going to steal your BTC? I only wanted to help you and that's what I get as a response? Ok, fine, but you could of simply replied to my PM and refuse.
jr. member
Activity: 32
Merit: 8
February 17, 2021, 05:12:04 PM
#25
@t00nces22: If your Bitcoins were from "years ago": was that before or after August 1, 2017? If it's older, you still own some Forkcoins (worth about $900 per Bitcoin you owned).

Got them! Thanks.
legendary
Activity: 3290
Merit: 16489
Thick-Skinned Gang Leader and Golden Feather 2021
February 17, 2021, 01:53:15 PM
#24
@t00nces22: If your Bitcoins were from "years ago": was that before or after August 1, 2017? If it's older, you still own some Forkcoins (worth about $900 per Bitcoin you owned).
jr. member
Activity: 32
Merit: 8
February 17, 2021, 01:33:57 PM
#23
Haha, no, it's not my site. I simply plugged their receiving addresses in to block explorers for the relevant coins you mentioned (BTC, ETH, and LTC), looking for an incoming transaction made around the same time as your last post for roughly the correct value. Everything on most blockchains is completely public. Knowing an address is all that is needed to look at all transactions involving that address.

I wasn't aware Mozilla were offering a VPN, but on closer inspection it runs on the Mullvad VPN network, which is one of those recommended by privacytools.io. Do they accept bitcoin payments?

Yes, I knew that most crypto transactions were publicly viewable, I just thought it would be a little harder and ambiguous to pick out any specific transaction. I have no idea if they accept crypto, I opted to pay with my AmEx since it will be considered a business expense for my taxes.

As far as the "take a pic" guy, I really didn't think there would be some draconian punishment meted out, I just wanted to let people here see what a board member was willing to do to steal from someone they thought was unaware. While I was at a loss to know how to get the coin back into the wild, I knew better than to pass a pic along. Others might not be so informed or aware. I thought it was important the movers and shakers and the helpful on the board were made aware of a douche in their midst. I know I will make it a point to warn others of "take a pic" douche if I see him on the board.

legendary
Activity: 2268
Merit: 18748
February 17, 2021, 05:35:43 AM
#22
I could, but there's not really a point: bitcoinermatt has -3 already, so obviously he has nothing to lose.
You are probably right, but I was keen to open/support a flag against this user and I wouldn't be comfortable doing that without independently verifiable proof. Further, asking people to send him pictures of their private keys is much more relevant from a "high risk in a trade" point of view than plagiarism is, in my opinion.

Yes Smiley Or cash by post Tongue
I was actually wondering if Mozilla accept bitcoin directly for their VPN service, as opposed to Mullvad itself. I know Mullvad do from your previous comments, although I admit I've never gotten round to using them since I have no complaints with my current VPN provider and my subscription doesn't expire for a while yet.

I'll PM you a 12 hour account (€0.08, just because I like Mullvad).
Thanks! I'll give it a whirl.
legendary
Activity: 3290
Merit: 16489
Thick-Skinned Gang Leader and Golden Feather 2021
February 17, 2021, 04:28:54 AM
#21
Paging @LoyceV. Would you be happy to be a trusted third party and confirm this PM?
I could, but there's not really a point: bitcoinermatt has -3 already, so obviously he has nothing to lose. Verifying the PM doesn't add much, and I have no reason to believe the PM is fake.

That being said, I can verify it if OP trusts me and sends me his CAPTCHA URL (so I don't expose my IP and don't have to spend 5 minutes clicking fire hydrants) and password by PM. After this, he'll have to reset the URL and change his password. But again, it's probably not worth the effort.

Hello, concerning your Paper wallet issue, if you want, I could help you recover it. You can send me a picture of the paper wallet and I'll tell you what to do from there.  Wink
I got a PM from this guy and just for the record, I think the people here ought to see this....
You can leave him negative feedback by yourself, with a Reference link to your post quoting his PM.

I wasn't aware Mozilla were offering a VPN, but on closer inspection it runs on the Mullvad VPN network, which is one of those recommended by privacytools.io. Do they accept bitcoin payments?
Yes Smiley Or cash by post Tongue
But I'm ashamed to admit my "favourite" payment method for Mullvad: BCH Shocked Unlike Bitcoin, it's accepted by Mullvad with 0 confirmations, and fees are low. You can literally pay any amount, so if you want a trial, just pay them for a few hours. I'll PM you a 12 hour account (€0.08, just because I like Mullvad).

I remember the days I paid around 0.001BTC per day for a VPN, that now gets me almost a year.
legendary
Activity: 2268
Merit: 18748
February 16, 2021, 08:05:29 PM
#20
Haha, no, it's not my site. I simply plugged their receiving addresses in to block explorers for the relevant coins you mentioned (BTC, ETH, and LTC), looking for an incoming transaction made around the same time as your last post for roughly the correct value. Everything on most blockchains is completely public. Knowing an address is all that is needed to look at all transactions involving that address.

I wasn't aware Mozilla were offering a VPN, but on closer inspection it runs on the Mullvad VPN network, which is one of those recommended by privacytools.io. Do they accept bitcoin payments?
jr. member
Activity: 32
Merit: 8
February 16, 2021, 07:52:21 PM
#19
$40 donation sent.
https://etherscan.io/tx/0xc267ebb0f14f02280c11fb62f1bbcbb8c21d708cdde46eab077b9f8c5bc55064

Thank you!



Paging @LoyceV. Would you be happy to be a trusted third party and confirm this PM?

Okay, how did you get that transaction? Was it your website I donated to? Were you able to pick one transaction from millions? I have to admit I am a little creeped out unless I sent it to you. But, at least you know I was good for my word.

As far as that site goes, I am looking it over and seeing what tools would work for me. If it is your site, you may want to include https://vpn.mozilla.org/ . I just got a notice from Mozilla and it is lightweight and on the fly as far as I can tell and the price beats just about any VPN out there.
legendary
Activity: 2268
Merit: 18748
February 16, 2021, 01:53:22 PM
#18
$40 donation sent.
https://etherscan.io/tx/0xc267ebb0f14f02280c11fb62f1bbcbb8c21d708cdde46eab077b9f8c5bc55064

Thank you!



Paging @LoyceV. Would you be happy to be a trusted third party and confirm this PM?
jr. member
Activity: 32
Merit: 8
February 16, 2021, 05:55:42 AM
#17
No payment necessary, but if you insist then I would ask you donate my $20 in a currency of your choice to https://privacytools.io/donate/



Hello, concerning your Paper wallet issue, if you want, I could help you recover it. You can send me a picture of the paper wallet and I'll tell you what to do from there.  Wink

I got a PM from this guy and just for the record, I think the people here ought to see this....
Would you be willing to let a trusted member verify that PM by logging in to your account?

Yes, that would be fine. Just let me know what I need to do and the admin can take a look.

$40 donation sent.
legendary
Activity: 3472
Merit: 10611
February 16, 2021, 01:12:43 AM
#16
No payment necessary, but if you insist then I would ask you donate my $20 in a currency of your choice to https://privacytools.io/donate/
Same. I liked this idea.
legendary
Activity: 2268
Merit: 18748
February 15, 2021, 11:20:35 PM
#15
No payment necessary, but if you insist then I would ask you donate my $20 in a currency of your choice to https://privacytools.io/donate/



Hello, concerning your Paper wallet issue, if you want, I could help you recover it. You can send me a picture of the paper wallet and I'll tell you what to do from there.  Wink

I got a PM from this guy and just for the record, I think the people here ought to see this....
Would you be willing to let a trusted member verify that PM by logging in to your account?
jr. member
Activity: 32
Merit: 8
February 15, 2021, 05:04:56 PM
#14
Is your paper wallet a private-key (weird big string) or a backup seed (list of words)?
To clarify your private key can look like any of the following:
Base58 uncompressed private key (note the first character)
5Kb8kLf9zgWQnogidDA76MzPL6TsZZY36hWXMssSzNydYXYB9KF
Can be imported in any wallet that has the import option

Base58 compressed private key (note the first character it can also be K)
L53fCHmQhbNp1B4JipfBtfeHZH7cAibzG9oK19XfiFzxHgAkz6JK
Can be imported in any wallet that has the import option

Hexadecimal private key (note the length is 64 and characters are 0-9 and a-f)
E9873D79C6D87DC0FB6A5778633389F4453213303DA61F20BD67FC233AA33262
Has to be converted to a base58 (WIF) private key like the 2 examples above before the wallets accept it. To do that you could use this open source tool: https://github.com/pointbiz/bitaddress.org (run offline)

Base58 encrypted private key using BIP38 (note the first 2 characters)
6PRW8vhrsbZJdZDtVCKtfnPoN7ecWKraUagCDg7M9APkNGMxx3fbwMkysT
In this case you also must have the password that were used to encrypt this key and some wallets don't accept this type so it has to be decrypted first before you can import it in a wallet. You can use the bitaddress.org tool to decrypt it.
Password used here is "123" in case you want to test decrypting in that tool.

So, it I import both together, I will have access to the balance?
You do not need to import either your addresses or your public keys. The only thing you need to import is your private keys - Electrum will derive the public key and the address automatically from the private key.

Okay, I have two paper wallets and each one has a public and private key. Does the fact I have both unlock the wallet?
The wallet will be "unlocked" simply by possession of the private key. The public key and/or address are simply printed so you can look up your balance or deposit more coins to the paper wallet without having to expose your private key. The private key is all that is needed to spend the funds, and is the only thing you need to import to Electrum.

Okay, the two of you gave me the help that got the BTC back in my hands. $20 to each of you in BTC, ETH, or LTC.... Your choice. To all others who replied and offered help, thank you for the offered help, but the two replies I got from o_e_l_e_o and pooya87 were the ones that were detailed enough to allow me to get the coin back into my control. I can now invest in hookers and blow.

Thank you all,
Todd


jr. member
Activity: 32
Merit: 8
February 14, 2021, 06:50:24 PM
#13
Hello, concerning your Paper wallet issue, if you want, I could help you recover it. You can send me a picture of the paper wallet and I'll tell you what to do from there.  Wink

I got a PM from this guy and just for the record, I think the people here ought to see this....


jr. member
Activity: 32
Merit: 8
February 14, 2021, 12:35:59 PM
#12
Download Electrum as TryNinja suggested (download it from the official website electrum.org), then import your private keys. Give it a minute to synchronize and it will display your balance.
When importing the private keys make sure to specify the right addresse's format.

So, it I import both together, I will have access to the balance?
You do not need to import either your addresses or your public keys. The only thing you need to import is your private keys - Electrum will derive the public key and the address automatically from the private key.

Okay, I have two paper wallets and each one has a public and private key. Does the fact I have both unlock the wallet?
The wallet will be "unlocked" simply by possession of the private key. The public key and/or address are simply printed so you can look up your balance or deposit more coins to the paper wallet without having to expose your private key. The private key is all that is needed to spend the funds, and is the only thing you need to import to Electrum.

Thank you both. I will have to get the paper wallets and give it a try. I only recorded the pubic key. I thought the private key was just to send money to my wallet.
legendary
Activity: 2268
Merit: 18748
February 14, 2021, 11:53:08 AM
#11
So, it I import both together, I will have access to the balance?
You do not need to import either your addresses or your public keys. The only thing you need to import is your private keys - Electrum will derive the public key and the address automatically from the private key.

Okay, I have two paper wallets and each one has a public and private key. Does the fact I have both unlock the wallet?
The wallet will be "unlocked" simply by possession of the private key. The public key and/or address are simply printed so you can look up your balance or deposit more coins to the paper wallet without having to expose your private key. The private key is all that is needed to spend the funds, and is the only thing you need to import to Electrum.
legendary
Activity: 2702
Merit: 3045
Top Crypto Casino
February 14, 2021, 10:43:02 AM
#10
Download Electrum as TryNinja suggested (download it from the official website electrum.org), then import your private keys. Give it a minute to synchronize and it will display your balance.
When importing the private keys make sure to specify the right addresse's format.
jr. member
Activity: 32
Merit: 8
February 14, 2021, 08:26:12 AM
#9
I have two keys. One appears to be the first type of hash and the other is the second hash.
Again, I need to get the hash where I can beat it up with passphrases until I can unlock it.

I'm assuming by "hash" you mean "string" because you don't need a hash. Private keys are numbers that are encoded using the common encoding methods I posted above and the resulting "strings" look like the examples with a specific starting character.
If you already have a string that looks like the first and second cases that start with letters 5, L or K then there is no passphrase needed. These strings ARE your private keys. Import them in Electrum as explained in previous comment.

Okay, I have two paper wallets and each one has a public and private key. Does the fact I have both unlock the wallet?
jr. member
Activity: 32
Merit: 8
February 14, 2021, 08:18:03 AM
#8
-snip-

It seems the first hash is your public key and the second one your private key. If so, you are good. To get access to your Bitcoins you need to import the private key into a wallet. I recommend Electrum wallet. Download and install it and follow the step-by-step tutorial[1] to import your private key.

[1] https://bitcoinelectrum.com/importing-your-private-keys-into-electrum/

Yes, the paper wallet (I actually have two, one has a BTC and the other may or may not have anything) I have has both public and private keys. So, it I import both together, I will have access to the balance?
legendary
Activity: 3472
Merit: 10611
February 14, 2021, 06:16:00 AM
#7
I have two keys. One appears to be the first type of hash and the other is the second hash.
Again, I need to get the hash where I can beat it up with passphrases until I can unlock it.

I'm assuming by "hash" you mean "string" because you don't need a hash. Private keys are numbers that are encoded using the common encoding methods I posted above and the resulting "strings" look like the examples with a specific starting character.
If you already have a string that looks like the first and second cases that start with letters 5, L or K then there is no passphrase needed. These strings ARE your private keys. Import them in Electrum as explained in previous comment.
tyz
legendary
Activity: 3360
Merit: 1533
February 14, 2021, 05:58:19 AM
#6
-snip-

It seems the first hash is your public key and the second one your private key. If so, you are good. To get access to your Bitcoins you need to import the private key into a wallet. I recommend Electrum wallet. Download and install it and follow the step-by-step tutorial[1] to import your private key.

[1] https://bitcoinelectrum.com/importing-your-private-keys-into-electrum/
jr. member
Activity: 32
Merit: 8
February 14, 2021, 05:48:36 AM
#5
Is your paper wallet a private-key (weird big string) or a backup seed (list of words)? How did you generate it?

You should be able to download Electrum (ELECTRUM.ORG), optionally verify the file signature for extra security (quick guide here) and import the private-key or seed to restore the wallet.

I don't remember how it was generated. I generated it after BTC took a big hit and stuck it in a safety deposit box. I need to be able to put the hash where I can try several different passphrases to try to unlock it. I don't remember which one I used, but there are only so many I would have used.


If your wallet has a private key (long string), you can go on Blockchain.com and import the wallet there by entering the private key (If it has a QR code, you can scan it.) then, import the wallet from there using the private key and you will now be able to withdraw from this wallet's balance.

How do I import the key to a place I can try to open the coin with pass phrases?

To clarify your private key can look like any of the following:
Base58 uncompressed private key (note the first character)
5Kb8kLf9zgWQnogidDA76MzPL6TsZZY36hWXMssSzNydYXYB9KF
Can be imported in any wallet that has the import option

Base58 compressed private key (note the first character it can also be K)
L53fCHmQhbNp1B4JipfBtfeHZH7cAibzG9oK19XfiFzxHgAkz6JK
Can be imported in any wallet that has the import option

Hexadecimal private key (note the length is 64 and characters are 0-9 and a-f)
E9873D79C6D87DC0FB6A5778633389F4453213303DA61F20BD67FC233AA33262
Has to be converted to a base58 (WIF) private key like the 2 examples above before the wallets accept it. To do that you could use this open source tool: https://github.com/pointbiz/bitaddress.org (run offline)

Base58 encrypted private key using BIP38 (note the first 2 characters)
6PRW8vhrsbZJdZDtVCKtfnPoN7ecWKraUagCDg7M9APkNGMxx3fbwMkysT
In this case you also must have the password that were used to encrypt this key and some wallets don't accept this type so it has to be decrypted first before you can import it in a wallet. You can use the bitaddress.org tool to decrypt it.
Password used here is "123" in case you want to test decrypting in that tool.

I have two keys. One appears to be the first type of hash and the other is the second hash.

Again, I need to get the hash where I can beat it up with passphrases until I can unlock it.

Thank you to all three of you.


legendary
Activity: 3472
Merit: 10611
February 14, 2021, 12:23:52 AM
#4
Is your paper wallet a private-key (weird big string) or a backup seed (list of words)?
To clarify your private key can look like any of the following:
Base58 uncompressed private key (note the first character)
5Kb8kLf9zgWQnogidDA76MzPL6TsZZY36hWXMssSzNydYXYB9KF
Can be imported in any wallet that has the import option

Base58 compressed private key (note the first character it can also be K)
L53fCHmQhbNp1B4JipfBtfeHZH7cAibzG9oK19XfiFzxHgAkz6JK
Can be imported in any wallet that has the import option

Hexadecimal private key (note the length is 64 and characters are 0-9 and a-f)
E9873D79C6D87DC0FB6A5778633389F4453213303DA61F20BD67FC233AA33262
Has to be converted to a base58 (WIF) private key like the 2 examples above before the wallets accept it. To do that you could use this open source tool: https://github.com/pointbiz/bitaddress.org (run offline)

Base58 encrypted private key using BIP38 (note the first 2 characters)
6PRW8vhrsbZJdZDtVCKtfnPoN7ecWKraUagCDg7M9APkNGMxx3fbwMkysT
In this case you also must have the password that were used to encrypt this key and some wallets don't accept this type so it has to be decrypted first before you can import it in a wallet. You can use the bitaddress.org tool to decrypt it.
Password used here is "123" in case you want to test decrypting in that tool.
member
Activity: 120
Merit: 63
February 13, 2021, 07:04:35 PM
#3
If your wallet has a private key (long string), you can go on Blockchain.com and import the wallet there by entering the private key (If it has a QR code, you can scan it.) then, import the wallet from there using the private key and you will now be able to withdraw from this wallet's balance.
legendary
Activity: 2758
Merit: 6830
February 13, 2021, 06:37:03 PM
#2
Is your paper wallet a private-key (weird big string) or a backup seed (list of words)? How did you generate it?

You should be able to download Electrum (ELECTRUM.ORG), optionally verify the file signature for extra security (quick guide here) and import the private-key or seed to restore the wallet.
jr. member
Activity: 32
Merit: 8
February 13, 2021, 06:33:11 PM
#1
Years ago I sent one BTC into a paper wallet and I would like to get it back out where I can access it. I don't remember how to check the hash and how to send it back where I can cash it out (not that I want to at this point) but I would like to get it into an active wallet where I can use it to trade. Any guidance would be appreciated... And I mean that. If you can help me, I'll send you $20 LTC or ETH or BTC.
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