WalletPaperbackup: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
No edit summary |
|||
Line 5: | Line 5: | ||
=== How to use with you Wallet === | === How to use with you Wallet === | ||
# Download PaperBack from the location provided before | «It should be noted this guide is for Windows Only, A Linux based guide is coming soon» | ||
<br /> | |||
#Download PaperBack from the location provided before | |||
#Open PaperBack | #Open PaperBack | ||
#Open Options and select the options you wish to have (For more info, read the page provided above) | #Open Options and select the options you wish to have (For more info, read the page provided above) |
Revision as of 01:23, 24 June 2011
PaperBack Encrypted Paper Backup of your Wallet
Basics
A program called PaperBack«2» allows a user to encrypt and print a paper copy of a file, to restore the file you scan or provide a image of the printed paper and it decodes the file
How to use with you Wallet
«It should be noted this guide is for Windows Only, A Linux based guide is coming soon»
- Download PaperBack from the location provided before
- Open PaperBack
- Open Options and select the options you wish to have (For more info, read the page provided above)
- Drag and drop the file (wallet.dat) into the window for printing
- File -> Save to bitmap, It will ask you what file to encode, and then where to save the bitmap
Restoring your Wallet
- Scan or provide the bitmap of the backup
- Wait for processing
- Save wallet.dat
Example
Here is the first Image: Encoded Image
Its a empty wallet.dat with Encryption on (AES-256), standard options past that
Here is the damaged copy, Opened in GIMP saved as a JPEG at 4% Compression, then converted back into a Bitmap: Damaged Re-Encoded Image
ECC had to correct 56bytes of bad data.. once decoded the md5 hashes where the same!
Here is a screenshot asking for the password (The password is "bitcoin")
Screen Shot