Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Bitcoin

Father-Son Team Helps People Brute-Force Their Lost Bitcoin Wallets (vice.com) 18

Hundreds of people have lost access to their cryptocurrency, and recovering those lost Bitcoins has become a lucrative business. "Motherboard talks to some of the people trying to get back their crypto, and the people who are making that happen in the newest episode of CRYPTOLAND on YouTube," writes Slashdot reader em1ly. Here's an excerpt from an article accompanying the episode: It's hard to know exactly how much Bitcoin is locked forever in wallets whose owners forgot the password, or in hard drives thrown out. There's plenty of anecdotes of desperate people trying to recover their lost Bitcoin. Chainalysis, a firm that tracks cryptocurrencies to help companies and law enforcement, estimated in 2018 that up to 23% of all Bitcoin is lost forever -- around 3.79 million bitcoins or the equivalent of around $170 billion at today's conversion rate. Naturally, some of the people who own those lost Bitcoin are willing to do anything to get them back. And there's a market for companies or individuals who promise to recover the lost Bitcoin for a fee.

There's the mysterious Wallet Recovery Service, run by an anonymous person who goes by DaveBitcoin, or Crypto Asset Recovery, a father and son startup based in New Hampshire. In essence, what these organizations do is try as many password or passphrase combinations as fast as they can -- or as fast as their password cracking software and hardware will allow -- until they get the right one for a specific wallet they're trying to break into. They brute force the password, but they need help from their customers -- some guess, at least, of what their password may have been. Charlie Brooks, the son in the duo that runs Crypto Asset Recovery, told Motherboard that their success rate is 32 percent, without counting those customers that they believe have almost no chance of getting their Bitcoin back (who they decline to take on as clients).

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Father-Son Team Helps People Brute-Force Their Lost Bitcoin Wallets

Comments Filter:
  • but they need help from their customers -- some guess, at least, of what their password may have been.

    That's not what brute force means, dude. That's just guessing shit.

    • Isn't that the definition of brute force? Guessing shit?

      What's the difference between "brute forcing" it and solving it after a few dozen educated guesses vs millions of random strings? Street cred?

      • I feel like it's been pretty standard to use 12 word seed phrases since at 10 years ago. If you set up a wallet before that and used some basic password your funds were likely looted a long time ago. The idea of brute-forcing a 12 word seed phrase might be feasible but only if we factor time-travel into the equation.
    • Brute forcing is guessing too but with random characters. This is starting with an initial seed. Instead of starting with "111.." it would be easier with "Bieber4Ever..", "bieberFourEver ..", etc
    • Whether it means brute force or not is entirely dependent on when they stop guessing. The difference between a dictionary attack and brute force attack depends only on what happens when you run out of words. Brute force is nothing more than guessing shit,.. all the shit.

      Ironically username checks out.

  • Wallet recovery service? Yes, my name is Satoshi nakamoto and my wallet address is...
  • So they can investigate what illegal product these shitcoins are used to buy.

"The medium is the massage." -- Crazy Nigel

Working...