pull down to refresh

This is just curiosity and being cautious, you know, you gotta know what to do just in case. Rushing things usually ends up as straight sh*t. I found this site, and the info looks kinda solid, but then toward the end it starts talking about software I've never even heard of. Can you check it out for me?
In my opinion those software they recommend are over engineered.
If you've connected sparrow wallet to your own node you're already miles ahead.
Its then just a process of: spin up your node send your coins to another address in your own wallet
spin up the forks node (note it will look like your coins didn't move once synced, repeat step 1 if this is not the case) spend those coins to a different address
Once those 2 transactions are confirmed on their respective chains, your utxos are now safely independent of each other.
reply
For people who don't run their own node, what's the best move? I'm guessing there's no deadline to actually claim the forkcoins, right? The timing is only important for anyone tryna dump them. And seriously, is there no trustable wallet out there where you can actually pick the blockchain you want?
reply
NO do not, I repeat DO NOT "trust" a wallet to connect to the node that has the chain that you believe is Bitcoin. The WAR part of fork war is people trying to hurt each other.
If the wallet you pick has a different opinion than you on which chain is actually Bitcoin, you could be fooled into sending your coins into the void (the same address on the wrong chain which is effectively the void if you don't know how to do something simple like connect sparrow to a node)
Okay seriously, Sparrow doesn't even require you to install electrum server. Just run your node and electrum on the same computer and follow instructions
Here's a video from kahoob (a Bitcoiner I know from a Bitcoin discord)
reply
How does Bitcoin Core know the intended blockchain?
reply
Well the entire reason there is a chain split is because one chains follows one set of rules, and another chain follows a different set of rules which at some point caused a block to be accepted in one chain and rejected in the other.
reply
Gotcha. So, if I'm understanding this right, to safely claim the coins from both blockchains, we need to have Bitcoin Core and Knots, and then connect Sparrow to both of them, one at a time, of course. Is that it?
reply
Yup and the one that you're connected to at the time is the coins for the chain you're looking at in the moment.
reply
That sounds way too easy. If that's the case, I don't think Sparrow is even necessary, since Bitcoin Core and Knots both have an interface to import a wallet. Or is there some benefit to using Sparrow?
learn to run a node with different chains hahahaha You have plenty of time to practice. Bitcoin is only for the brave...
reply
Any guide for that?
reply
right, you must run both chains and never appeal to any "claim services". Are all scams.
reply
Yes, but the situation is a bit different than in 2017. Be aware of scams, of so called "claim services" ! They only want your private keys and you are fucked, on BOTH chains !
So if you don't know how to do it, you better just stick with a chain and never "claim" the others.
reply