Now you are blaming me for your mistakes. You first started to blame blockchain.info, now that it is clearly not their fault, you are blaming me for your disregard of basic security rules.
No, no, no))
I mean, you can't trust online wallets. And certainly not to tell anyone else what allegedly is a safe way to store coins.
Confirmation? Today, right now - MyEtherWallet service reports that their DNS servers were hacked and entering the service site passed the transition to the phishing site. Already a lot of messages about the theft of funds from accounts. Then you say that online shit like blockchain.info is it reliable? Difference blockchain.info and MyEtherWallet is huge, from MyEtherWallet there is feedback, they recognize problems and respond to messages, not write - it's your problems, read the agreement...
That's the wrong way to store your seed. That's how the hacker got access to it and stole your coins.
Even if you had a hardware wallet you would have been hacked.
Even if you had a paper wallet you would have been hacked.
Even if you had a bitcoin core wallet on an airgapped pc you would have been hacked.
That was not blockchain.info fault, as it is the most popular wallet out there.When you click on the Seed on blockchain.info they tell many times to write it on paper.
Learn from the experience, store your hardware wallet seed on a piece of paper or an offline environment.
I agree that it wasn't right to keep seed that way and now I'm using a different way, but I don't think anyone had or has access to these photos.
Tell me exactly how you can access them? Has anyone done this yet?