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Topic: What can you do to keep your digital assets safe? - page 4. (Read 592 times)

full member
Activity: 1218
Merit: 112
Well, keeping digital assets safe is a major problem for crypto investors, many people have lost their assets due to theft and other types of frauds, so it is very imperative to keep it safe. If i can manage some funds then i would buy a hardware wallet, i believe it is the best way to secure one's digital assets.
jr. member
Activity: 242
Merit: 7
Well, basic knowledge of why you should never share your private key or mnemonic should be enough for most.
Either print a paper wallet on a PC with no internet and hide the paper wallet, or if you intend to spend - wait for Galaxy s10 with integrated hardware wallet. If the s10 rumors are false - buy a hardware wallet, I own one Ledger, and I've prepaid a Universa HODL wallet, too.
full member
Activity: 645
Merit: 100
This all comes from the underdevelopment of technology. No matter how much time developers spend to protect customers, fraudsters find vulnerabilities. There are many vulnerable zones on the Internet. Which leads to the rage of your coins. Each of us is able to defend himself, but this does not guarantee you complete security.

But do not be disappointed. Since in the real world fraudsters are even bigger and they steal billions annually.
full member
Activity: 854
Merit: 101
With the great development of technology comes also bad elements who want to gain an easy but illegal way. Whether you choose a hardware, software or paper wallet to manage your passwords and private keys, you should do an extra step to ensure that assets are safe, like:
* Encrypting your wallet with a strong password
* Making regular backups and storing them in multiple locations
* Using multisignature security, and
* Generating, writing down and hiding your wallet's mnemonic seed or private keys

legendary
Activity: 3234
Merit: 1029
Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform
Get a trusted offline wallet. Problem solved. Only pull out the amount you need.
And always to make sure our wallet never connect to the internet. The hacker can do nothing with the wallet that not connected to the internet. As far as i know, even the paper wallet is much better compared to the hardware wallet. Offline wallet always becomes the best choice.
sr. member
Activity: 594
Merit: 250
One of the best advices in the article is the Education and Diligence. I think this is the most important advice that cryptoenthusiasts can do. Any advice here is very useful only if each investor would be very diligent and keep on educating himself. Get informed every time.
member
Activity: 336
Merit: 11
keep it on personal wallet like hardware or web wallet, as long it's not on exchange site our digital asset got minimum chance to get hacked.
and also open email from different pc that used for trading.
hero member
Activity: 2842
Merit: 625
DGbet.fun - Crypto Sportsbook
Get a trusted offline wallet. Problem solved. Only pull out the amount you need.
And that is hardware wallet like ledger nano s or trezor.

Because keeping one asset in exchange wallet is dangerous as exchanges are been hacked pretty much this time.
Yes, they are likely to be hacked and don't listen if there are prominent people that tells you that it's okay to store your funds in exchanges. They just want you to deliver such amounts and volume to their exchange. Keep your funds on a safer place that we mentioned and don't provide your private keys to a stranger.
legendary
Activity: 1792
Merit: 1283
The article itself is pretty basic IMO, just lists common knowledge like installing a virus scanner etc.
Not all too interesting for most people...

The thing is that people who are most likely going to be affected by scams and malware, are exactly the type of people who don't read articles like these.

Those people would probably be served best by just using a hardware wallet for everything.
sr. member
Activity: 896
Merit: 267
★Bitvest.io★ Play Plinko or Invest!
The best way to keep your digital assets safe and secure is through putting in trusted wallet. I usually keep my digital assets in a hardware wallet where I know it is totally safe where no can hack or stealth it. Do not tell to anyone where you keep your digital assets.
jr. member
Activity: 322
Merit: 1
I think it best to keep all one digital assets in a hardware wallet best know to you or offline wallet. Because keeping one asset in exchange wallet is dangerous as exchanges are been hacked pretty much this time.
full member
Activity: 644
Merit: 101
use a personal wallet and the problem is solved. hacking usually attacks the exchange because of that. don't hold coins in wallet exchange because it's very risky. if we examine there will be no problems, so always be vigilant.
jr. member
Activity: 253
Merit: 1
Get a trusted offline wallet. Problem solved. Only pull out the amount you need.
hero member
Activity: 1064
Merit: 509
https://dex.openledger.io/ Truly Decentralized
Cryptocurrency thefts are on the rise.

There are now over 1,500 different types of cryptocurrencies, 22 million wallets for storing them, and thousands of exchanges to trade them on. This rise in numbers over a short period since Bitcoin introduction in 2008 turned a multitude of crypto users and traders into millionaires in the process. And although the lucrative investment has increased the pocket size of many, it also brought in those who want to take advantage of it.

Within the first nine months of 2018 alone, cryptocurrency theft has led to the loss of nearly a billion dollars, a 250 percent rise from a previous year. Whether it is through the hacking of exchanges, such as the $500 million Coincheck hack, or the theft of a few dollars from a wallet, cryptocurrency thieves are finding new means of taking your cryptocurrencies. Phishing, brute forcing and phone-porting are just a few of the methods used by crypto thieves to steal your cryptoassets, but there are ways to prevent them.

How hackers can steal your cryptoassets

Phishing
Phishing has been around for quite some time, and it is no longer only utilized by princes of foreign lands requiring your credit card information. The technique has been expanded for cryptocurrency theft, too. Hackers send emails to various cryptocurrency owners, and when opened, infect computers with malicious malware, at times even holding a victim’s computer hostage until a cryptocurrency ransom is paid. 

Brute forcing
Brute forcing relies on hacking programs, often purchased through the dark web, which use a trial and error approach to gain users’ passwords. If the program doesn’t pick up your password on the fifth try maybe it’ll get it on a try five thousand. All that matters is that once the program achieves what it was built for, you can say goodbye to your cryptocurrencies.

Phone-porting
Phone-porting occurs when a hacker uses a victim’s telephone number to take over his/her mobile account. Then hacker accesses the victim’s exchange account by resetting the password with the telephone number and then steals cryptocurrency from the account.


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