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0 sats \ 3 replies \ @MathiuJ 13 Feb 2023 \ parent \ on: Using a HDD instead of SSD for a node bitcoin
I typical don't do these types of things with my node; in your proposed situation I would tell my friend to use Blockonomics Address Tracker (https://www.blockonomics.co/blockonomics#/addresswatcher) or Cointracker (https://www.cointracker.io/) to see the transaction history of their extended public key, vice using the command line commands in Bitcoin Core to look it up on my personal node. I also use https://bitnodes.io/ to track the status of my node, ensuring that it is still visible to the network via incoming connections and thus contributing. But, in general, unless there is a reason for me to not trust what I am seeing on these websites, I just use these other sites for analytic data about the network and my wallets because they have an easier user interface.
Spook !!! I would not recommend posting your XPUBs on a website. They can link you're IP address with all your addresses. At least use Tor. Even using Tor all your UTXOs will be linked together by the service and this data can be leaked.
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I agree with @zazon, What is the point of running a full node, if you're going to leak your xpubs in other wallet information to hosted services?
You might as well not even run the full node, and just use a SPV wallet like Electrum or Sparrow.
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I respect that maximizing privacy and/or anonymity in your transactions on the public Bitcoin ledger may be the primary overriding priority for you, @DemandUtopia, and @zazon while running a full node, but that is not the case for me. Thank you for your recommendations concerning extended public keys and unspent transaction outputs; I hope that my comments were of some value to you both as well concerning operation of a node using a HDD.
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