Difference between revisions of "Brainwallet"

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Brainwallets are like the mnemonic seeds generated by hardware wallets, however, the human user generates the words themselves and memorises them without any written record.  
 
Brainwallets are like the mnemonic seeds generated by hardware wallets, however, the human user generates the words themselves and memorises them without any written record.  
  
The mnemonic seed/ passphrase is never written down. It is 'stored' in the holder's brain.  
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The [[mnemonic]] seed/ passphrase is never written down. It is 'stored' in the holder's brain.  
  
 
If the holder forgets the passphrase (or becomes incapacitated), the money is likely lost forever - not a very secure storage method.
 
If the holder forgets the passphrase (or becomes incapacitated), the money is likely lost forever - not a very secure storage method.

Latest revision as of 00:53, 26 April 2022

Brainwallets are like the mnemonic seeds generated by hardware wallets, however, the human user generates the words themselves and memorises them without any written record.

The mnemonic seed/ passphrase is never written down. It is 'stored' in the holder's brain.

If the holder forgets the passphrase (or becomes incapacitated), the money is likely lost forever - not a very secure storage method.

Creating randomness in passphrase words is extremely difficult to do by hand, therefore security is again compromised.

It is possible to use a [BIP 39] passphrase generator to get strong entropy/ randomness and optionally add a salt value for additional security, however storing anything in the human brain carries inherent risks.

Use a brainwallet at your own (high) risk.

For a detailed tutorial on complex brainwallet creation, see this article by Dr Craig Wright.