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Wasabi is a privacy wallet for Bitcoin only, v2.6.0 "Prometheus" marks a significant milestone in our survival strategy, delivering major improvements in resiliency by eliminating dependency on centralized infrastructure while making it harder to stop.
💥 Support for Standard BIP 158 Block Filters
Wasabi can now synchronize using BIP 158 filters without requiring a backend/indexer. You can connect directly to your own node, significantly enhancing synchronization speed and resilience. This improvement allows clients to operate fully sovereign and independent of specific servers.
💻 Full Node Integration Rework
The previous integration was replaced with a simpler, more flexible system which is not limited to a specific Bitcoin node fork and doesn't depend on the node running on the same machine as Wasabi, or require modifications to the node's configuration.
Simply enable the RPC server on your node and point Wasabi to it, ensuring all Bitcoin network interactions happen through your own node, bypassing third parties for getting blocks, fee estimations, block filters, and broadcasting transactions.
🔐 Create & Recover SLIP 39 Shares
You can now create and recover wallets with multiple share backups using SLIP 39. Simply specify the number of shares and the required threshold for recovery (e.g., a 2-of-3 scheme requires 2 of the 3 generated seed phrases to unlock the funds).
This offers additional flexibility for backups, as individual shares can be compromised without endangering funds.
Special thanks to Trezor (SatoshiLabs) for sponsoring this amazing feature.
💪 Nostr Update Manager
We're introducing a cutting-edge mechanism using the censorship-resistant Nostr network to receive update information and download locations instead of relying on GitHub's goodwill.
This considerably improves resiliency, allowing updates even if GitHub is inaccessible. Naturally, the manager still verifies that displayed updates are signed by our secure certificate.
🤯 And more…
We've also been busy under the hood with several miscellaneous improvements:
-Updated Avalonia to v11.2.7, fixing numerous UI bugs (including restoring Minimize on macOS Sequoia!). -Added a configurable third-party fallback for broadcasting transactions if other methods fail. -Changed our Windows Code Signing Certificate, now using Azure Trusted Signing. -Fixed numerous bugs, improved our codebase, and enhanced our CI pipeline. -Provided the option to avoid using any third-party Exchange Rate and Fee Rate providers (Wasabi can work without them). -Rebuilt all JSON Serialization mechanisms avoiding default .NET converters. Serialization is now stricter.
Damn I thought this wallet was dead. I used to mix often with them but haven’t in like two years
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116 sats \ 3 replies \ @kruw OP 5 May
Wasabi is more alive than ever, and is even setting new world records for coinjoin transactions:
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Who’s the coordinator?
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220 sats \ 1 reply \ @kruw OP 6 May
I run a coordinator on my node, you can check https://liquisabi.com or https://wabisator.com to find other coordinators broadcasting their connection info to Nostr.
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Thanks for the info!
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21 sats \ 1 reply \ @ek 5 May
RIP #971491 as top boost
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The top post like the room for blockspace is a free market...
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21 sats \ 5 replies \ @Jon_Hodl 10h
Is there any way that you could make all of the Wasabi CoinJoin output sizes the same size or a series of the same size?
Like only have these output sizes:
  • 1.00000000
  • 0.10000000
  • 0.01000000
  • 0.00100000
  • 0.00010000
…and anything smaller than that just gets donated to the coordinator or miners?
My biggest problem with Wasabi is that the outputs are all different and often unique sizes.
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21 sats \ 3 replies \ @kruw OP 9h
The design you described is essentially what already occurs. There are standard denominations that each client chooses from when decomposing into outputs. Participating in rounds with high liquidity helps clients to avoid creating unique values, and minimizes the leftover dust that gets donated to coordinators/miners.
Reducing the set of possible standard denominations is a tradeoff; fewer denomination options will increase the chance of matching your outputs with other users, but will result in higher waste.
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21 sats \ 2 replies \ @Jon_Hodl 8h
Ok. Cool.
My next question is how easy is it to irreversibly delete a wallet from my computer?
I want to be able to deposit, CoinJoin a while, and then delete every single remnant of the the wallet from my computer forever.
How do I do that?
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21 sats \ 1 reply \ @kruw OP 8h
Open the "Wallet Folder" from the search bar at the top, from here you can delete the .json file for an individual wallet.
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21 sats \ 0 replies \ @Jon_Hodl 8h
🫡
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deleted by author
21 sats \ 1 reply \ @2053456d48 17h
I can't find links to download it for Android devices....
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Wasabi is only available on desktop Linux/Mac/Windows :(
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @nichro 2h
Was curious how it plays with hardware wallets and saw this in FAQ:
DOES WASABI SUPPORT HARDWARE WALLETS? Wasabi does support hardware wallet usage through the standard Bitcoin-core HWI, and coinjoining straight to a hardware wallet is possible, but signing a coinjoin trasaction with a hardware wallet is not implemented.
Does this mean you cannot coinjoin with wasabi without keys being hot/loaded in it (versus cold on the connected HW)?
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So why did it go into hiding?
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Link direct download app from offucual page
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Great info
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I lose my sat to this wallet thought they operate no more