erizi0n

joined 10 months ago
[–] erizi0n@alien.top 1 points 9 months ago

SafePal Wallet may be what you are looking for, it has a software and a hardware version.

[–] erizi0n@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

There are good crypto YouTubers out there, like Benjamin Cowen, he doesn’t even run ads on his videos.

There’s also a guy that does whiteboard explanations (can’t remember the his name), but if you search on YouTube for crypto whiteboards he might appear.

Anyways, I’m gonna give my last two cents to you, so just remember this about crypto investments, no one knows when crypto will actually go up or down (“no one knows shit about fuck”), do your own research, mainly invest in the top 2 cryptos (BTC and ETH), don’t diversify too much, learn about one specific crypto niche or blockchain network that’s fun to you and you really like (like L2’s protocols, gaming, AI etc.) and invest maximum on more 2 to 5 different alts (alt coins - other coins rather than BTC) if you have extra cash apart from your main holds (BTC/ETH) and you will be more than fine.

[–] erizi0n@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago (2 children)

OP, somethings for you to learn, cuz you are kinda messing everything up together:

Seed phrase: those 12 to 24 words (from the BIP39 mnemonic word list of 2048 possible words) that give you an infinite of possible private keys, it works like a master key. NEVER GIVE THIS TO ANYONE!

Passphrase: a 25th word/phrase/whatever you want, chosen by you, for extra security for a new set of infinite possible private keys, every new passphrase used on the same seed phrase opens up a new infinite of possible private keys. NEVER GIVE THIS TO ANYONE!

Private key: the string of characters that’s used to sign transactions for a specific wallet from the set of private keys derivative from a seed phrase or a combined seed phrase with a specific passphrase. NEVER GIVE THIS TO ANYONE!

Public key: the string of characters you use, or give to someone, to receive money/crypto.

I described it as lay as possible for you to better understand, but this info. alone is not enough, dig this on Google/YouTube by yourself, cuz you are your own bank now. So if you are not smart and careful your only client (you) loses all his stored money/crypto.

[–] erizi0n@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Looks great, I’ll give it a try! But first, and not pointing fingers, it’s just in crypto we gotta be extra careful (hope you understand) How can one look for a possible scam/exploit in the App?

[–] erizi0n@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

One sentence in your whole comment is false: “This database has never been hacked, as Bitcoin.”

True for Ethereum, false for Bitcoin.

On Aug. 15th, 2010, an unknown hacker nearly destroyed Bitcoin. The hacker generated 184.467 billion BTC out of thin air, in what has become known as the “Value Overflow Incident”. Satoshi hard forked the chain to remove the 184.467 billion BTC, which is the only thing that saved Bitcoin from dying an early death that day. (Source: https://en.bitcoinwiki.org/wiki/Value_overflow_incident)

[–] erizi0n@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

What do you mean by ETH sent through a SC? I thought ETH on L1 was only native ETH, so no ERC20 contract. Can you please further explain this?

Thanks, in advance!

[–] erizi0n@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

Did you try their “Lost Asset Recovery” thing? Just google it to see how it’s done: “CoinBase Lost Asset Recovery”. Not available to all networks though, but try your luck! And good luck!

[–] erizi0n@alien.top 1 points 10 months ago

OP, did you try their “Lost Asset Recovery” thing? Just google it to see how it’s done: “CoinBase Lost Asset Recovery”. Not available to all networks, but try your luck! And good luck!