WalletGenerator.net
bips
WalletGenerator.net | bips | |
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39 | 1,282 | |
636 | 8,961 | |
- | 1.3% | |
0.0 | 6.8 | |
about 1 year ago | about 16 hours ago | |
HTML | Wikitext | |
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Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
WalletGenerator.net
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How did they steal all my Dogecoin and what can I do about it?
Without being able to look at your wallet, I can’t judge exactly what happened when. However I will point out that the code on https://github.com/walletgeneratornet/WalletGenerator.net hasn’t changed since before the vulnerabilities came about. Therefore I would assume you downloaded the code from the live site during the period it was vulnerable. And I would further assume that you immediately generated and used a physical paper wallet. This would have exposed your key, either because it phoned home or because the wallet you generated was one of a known non-random set. Either way, on checking the wallet and discovering coins in it, the bad actor was able to drain it either immediately or at a future point in time.
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Making a paper wallet offline
I found a website called walletgenerator.net that lets you create paper wallets, but back in 2018 a vulnerability was discovered where duplicate key pairs were generated and potentially stored on the server. They provide the website source code's GitHub repo for the at the bottom of each page. My question is: if you were to download the source code and run it on an offline PC, would it be safe again?
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How do you create your own bitcoin wallet? I mean without CEX or other 3rd parties. How do you really own your bitcoins with your keys?
You can create a paper wallet (just one private code and one public address) based on your random mouse movements. There is a website for this. https://walletgenerator.net/ Download the website and run it on an offline computer (to be sure your address isn't sent back to anyone) and print out the paper go to atm to deposit money. I did this for a small "buried" treasure if any kids solve a cryptographic puzzle on a map in our home.
- Criptografia um tanto complicada
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Can anyone help me out to see if this GitHub code generates a unique secure wallet address and not some scammy address which would be compromised
So I want to create a paper wallet for PIVX cryptocurrency, did some research online and stumbled upon https://walletgenerator.net/
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A confusion about the wallet addresses
As an example, I create a new keypair at https://walletgenerator.net/ : - Public 12gycnkMdc8MgLZjZHAjhf7wG5J3n9Yyii - Private 5JFTbTKucZa9WZCZemCBWF2MhxSGwLmqwotiY4THYY1SW8xbQXG So, if I import that private key into Electrum, I get the same public key. What if I generate a new receiving address?
- Warning: Major paper wallet generator sites are scams and can drain your wallet / steal your coins anytime they want
- Daily Discussion, December 17, 2021
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How effective are paper wallets for long term storage of assets? And what’s the best method of creating one?
If you're looking for something a little more sophisticated this is more likely what you're looking for. https://walletgenerator.net/
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I lost my bitcoin, can someone please help!
I generated this wallet using walletgenerator.net last year. I put about 1 bitcoin in it.
bips
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Understanding and avoiding visually ambiguous characters in IDs
Modern bitcoin addresses use a base-32 character set that leaves out some of the most ambiguous pairs and also permutes the address ordering so that the most visually similar remaining characters produce single bit errors which are better handled by the addresses error detecting (and potentially correcting) code.
https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0173.mediawi...
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Bitcoin Block 840000
Context: Bitcoin miners have just adopted a 50% pay cut for themselves. This pay cut was baked into Bitcoin protocol at the launch of the network (mostly, see "BIP 42" [1]). The OP link gives information about the block in which this pay cut was made.
I get that HN comments tend to dismiss Bitcoin. But the fact that for the fourth time this pay cut has happened without a hitch speaks volumes to what makes Bitcoin interesting: It's a rare combination of economic incentives and technology that keeps chugging. Nobody can stop it. And it's extremely resistant to change. It requires no governmental approval. All attempts at subversion or interference have failed. There aren't many things that come close to that kind of record.
[1] https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0042.mediawi...
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Generating and Working With ScriptPubKeys in Bitcoin Transactions
Bitcoin transactions involve locking funds in scripts, which can only be spent if those locking conditions are met. The part of the script that expresses these locking conditions are called ScriptPubKeys. On the other hand, the part that provides unlocking scripts to satisfy the locking conditions is referred to as ScriptSig for legacy transactions, and ScriptWitness for SegWit Transactions. These scripts are evaluated by a stack-based language called Script. This article will mainly focus on ScriptPubKeys.
- Blue Wallet and seed phrases
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Nano S seed compromised?
Here’s the reference https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0039.mediawiki
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Do you use 12 - 24 words?
There are 5 271 537 971 301 488 476 000 309 317 528 177 868 800 possible permutations of the bip39 wordlist found here: https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0039/english.txt when using 12 word seeds. You probably have better change to win the lottery every week for the rest of your life than cracking a 12 word seed in correct order
- 24 words
- Creating a custom Bip39 brain wallet
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SEC Charges Kraken for Operating as an Unregistered Securities Exchange
No one controls Bitcoin, because it's a protocol. Bitcoin Core is the reference implementation, but there are others, and anyone can create new implementations if they wish. Also, the Bitcoin Core maintainers can't just change something on a whim, because users would then switch to another fork. Maintainers (or miners or other groups) can't force their changes on users, because everyone can decide on their own which version they want to use.
The protocol development happens through BIPs (Bitcoin improvement proposals): https://github.com/bitcoin/bips
BIPs are discussed for years, before (and if) they are implemented, and basically everyone needs to agree on them, because no one wants to fork the blockchain, which could be devastating.
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Recover Cool Wallet seed to a Ledger?
All the seeds generated from the CoolWallet (Number / Word) adhere to the BIP-39 protocol.
What are some alternatives?
Bitcoin.org - Bitcoin.org Website
brainflayer - A proof-of-concept cracker for cryptocurrency brainwallets and other low entropy key algorithms.
coinbin - Javascript Bitcoin Wallet. Supports Multisig, Stealth, HD, SegWit, Bech32, Time Locked Addresses, RBF and more!
P2P-Trading-Exchanges - Person-to-Person bitcoin Trading Exchanges
multidoge - MultiDoge is a desktop Dogecoin client, powered by dogecoinj. Ported from the MultiBit Bitcoin client.
solidity - Solidity, the Smart Contract Programming Language
seedpicker - Create your own BIP39 seed phrase, securely and transparently.
EIPs - The Ethereum Improvement Proposal repository
electrum - Electrum Bitcoin Wallet
bip39 - A web tool for converting BIP39 mnemonic codes
blockchain-wallet-v4-frontend - Blockchain.com's open source, non-custodial Wallet
solana - Web-Scale Blockchain for fast, secure, scalable, decentralized apps and marketplaces.