pull down to refresh
0 new comment
20 sats \ 0 replies \ @Coinsreporter 17 Mar 2024
After inscription, the plates resemble to some of the ancient findings of Archeology.
reply
0 new comment
0 sats \ 0 replies \ @john_doe 17 Mar 2024
Smart. This and the seedqr, I like both ways.
reply
0 new comment
0 sats \ 4 replies \ @btcthinker 17 Mar 2024
Doing so does not increase security, but increases the risk of loss.
reply
0 new comment
0 sats \ 3 replies \ @john_doe 17 Mar 2024
Unless we make a backup of the website.
reply
0 new comment
136 sats \ 0 replies \ @supertestnet 18 Mar 2024 freebie
You might also be able to just write out instructions. E.g. it seems clear that each glyph encodes 11 bits of information because there are 11 potential strokes in each glyph. The table says what stroke to apply when the bit is 00000000001, 00000000010, 00000000100, etc., so you can probably just write down 11 indicators of what the strokes mean and a copy of the actual bip39 list and a sentence or two saying "go through the word list and increment an 11 bit number every time you encounter a word. The glyphs are the words you need." Then you'll have everything you need to reconstruct your seed.
reply
0 new comment
10 sats \ 1 reply \ @flubaar 28 Mar 2024 freebie
Funny how none of the bitcoiners thought to back this up on the BTC blockchain ... and instead think about saving it to PDF/Email...as if those won't be lost with time potentially.
I'd probably do as supertestnet says and backup the algorithm which explains how to get the binary bits out of glyphs and how that relates to bip39 list, which I assume I'd be able to pull up from the internet at any point in the future.
Then I'd probably link to the block/tx where I stored the data to "decrypt" the cypher.
If your data no longer exists on Bitcoin Ledger, most likely your bitcoin you're attempting to recover won't be worth anything anyways at that point... so I'd consider this a reasonable way to back up this information long term.
Reference Talk: "Jason Lowery - Softwar (MIT 2023)"
reply
0 new comment
0 sats \ 0 replies \ @john_doe 29 Mar 2024
And where do you store the reference link of the transaction? Somewhere you can lose it?
Saving it to the blockchain is not appealing in terms of cost/benefit. I would rather save it on Github and Gitlab if redundancy is needed for example, and why not locally. It is free if you already have an external backup drive.
reply
0 new comment
0 sats \ 5 replies \ @DarthCoin 17 Mar 2024
Yes is really interesting method to hide the seed.
The question is: where do you hide also the decoding sheet?
Because without that one, your seed is worthless.
reply
0 new comment
10 sats \ 3 replies \ @030a29f333 17 Mar 2024
I suppose as long as this website is up you'll be able to decode it right?
reply
0 new comment
0 sats \ 2 replies \ @DarthCoin 17 Mar 2024
hahaha good point :)
reply
0 new comment
10 sats \ 1 reply \ @mrldotsh OP 17 Mar 2024
You could also make a local copy of the website („Save as PDF“) and store it in the cloud/send it to yourself via email.
Some options to make a back up of a simple website such as this one
reply
0 new comment
0 sats \ 0 replies \ @030a29f333 17 Mar 2024
🫡
reply
0 new comment
20 sats \ 0 replies \ @02548d5c1b 17 Mar 2024 freebie
😅🧐 this
reply
0 new comment