Difference between revisions of "Brainwallet"

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Use a brainwallet at your own (high) risk.
 
Use a brainwallet at your own (high) risk.
  
For a detailed tutorial on complex brainwallet creation, see [https://craigwright.net/blog/bitcoin-blockchain-tech/how-to-make-a-brain-wallet/ this] article by [[Craig Wright]].
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For a detailed tutorial on complex brainwallet creation, see [https://craigwright.net/blog/bitcoin-blockchain-tech/how-to-make-a-brain-wallet/ this] article by [https://craigwright.net/about/#biography Dr Craig Wright].

Revision as of 05:31, 30 December 2019

Brainwallets are like the mnemonic seeds generated by hardware wallets, only the human user generates the words themselves and memorise 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 to this 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.