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Topic: TitanBTC are ignoring my questions about their 2fa coin (Read 478 times)

legendary
Activity: 2520
Merit: 3238
The Stone the masons rejected was the cornerstone.
It looks like he is responding now as per this post

https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/m.49090937

 Hopefully he will respond to you too. Goodluck
Hox
sr. member
Activity: 761
Merit: 299
Sorry AFAIK Titan can not bypass their own 2FA security you need to get the registration email and password from the owner who registered the coin and sold it to you. 

Thanks for the link, I haven't seen that page. You have been infinitely more helpful than their support.

I will try to contact the guy I bought it from.

Were you able to contact TitanBTC and was the coin ownership 100% transferred to you?

Still nothing from TitanBTC.

I am in contact with the original owner but they don't remember the email/password. They have also tried to contact TitanBTC to see if there are any options here, but as far as I know they have not heard anything either.
hero member
Activity: 720
Merit: 1025
It sounds that using 2fa is just bad design in coins, since they change hands...

I should add, I'm sorry to hear what happened! I hope you manage to recover your BTC...
newbie
Activity: 7
Merit: 0
sr. member
Activity: 356
Merit: 335
If you don’t believe, why are you here?
It was a cryptolator coin. I contacted him and he was prompt and helpful. This was of my own doing, I should have been more mindful prior to loading it 😕
legendary
Activity: 2590
Merit: 3014
Welt Am Draht
I feel your frustration Hox. I lost a 1BTC in a similar circumstance. The coin maker said the only way in which the bltcoin (which I loaded) could be recovered is through the pass phrase given to initial purchaser. That person no longer had that info. My general opinion is that 2FA is cumbersome for the collectible market dynamics.

Mind telling us which coin?

I bought a coin from Gravitate once upon a time and redeemed it long before his meltdown. The private key wouldn't register. Only after many hours of trawling my mind did I remember he sent me a message via Ebay or whatever telling me the printed private key had a couple of figures reversed.

What seems like a novel security technique at the time can turn into a fund extinguisher years down the line.
sr. member
Activity: 356
Merit: 335
If you don’t believe, why are you here?
I feel your frustration Hox. I lost a 1BTC in a similar circumstance. The coin maker said the only way in which the bltcoin (which I loaded) could be recovered is through the pass phrase given to initial purchaser. That person no longer had that info. My general opinion is that 2FA is cumbersome for the collectible market dynamics.
legendary
Activity: 1511
Merit: 1072
quack
Sorry AFAIK Titan can not bypass their own 2FA security you need to get the registration email and password from the owner who registered the coin and sold it to you. 

Thanks for the link, I haven't seen that page. You have been infinitely more helpful than their support.

I will try to contact the guy I bought it from.

Were you able to contact TitanBTC and was the coin ownership 100% transferred to you?
Hox
sr. member
Activity: 761
Merit: 299
Sorry AFAIK Titan can not bypass their own 2FA security you need to get the registration email and password from the owner who registered the coin and sold it to you. 

Thanks for the link, I haven't seen that page. You have been infinitely more helpful than their support.

I will try to contact the guy I bought it from.
legendary
Activity: 1806
Merit: 1164
Sorry AFAIK Titan can not bypass their own 2FA security you need to get the registration email and password from the owner who registered the coin and sold it to you. Buying a 2FA Titan requires trust between buyer and seller I would personally prefer to buy a private key Titan. Hope you can get this sorted out.
Hox
sr. member
Activity: 761
Merit: 299
The person you purchased the coin from did not provide you the email and password for the coin?

No, I bought a bunch of coins from them and didn't realise at the time the requirements to redeem it.

Regardless there should be a way I can prove ownership of the coin and redeem, or at least they should tell me I need to contact the original owner.
legendary
Activity: 1806
Merit: 1164
The person you purchased the coin from did not provide you the email and password for the coin?
Hox
sr. member
Activity: 761
Merit: 299
I have one of the two factor 0.1 BTC coins that I purchased from a user on this forum. I don't have the "coin email" or password required to use their online "redeem form".  I contacted TitanBTC via their website and via PM here about how I can redeem the funds on this coin but have not received any response. I know they are still around because they posted in this thread, which is what prompted me to message them here.

I previously had a very high opinion of them, they make beautiful coins, but this experience has changed my mind.

Anyone have a suggestion of where I should to go from here?
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