Address
1L8SqDEvaA3WnDinobai21ZbnyC79XuJGn has a current balance of 2.11752132 BTC and last outgoing transactions where UTXOs of this address were spent were in
2021-03-03: tx
bdc3bc54a358301552c03eecb5c6994bc13066284f795211a2db6497f5692cd72021-01-09: tx
d27a036c3d1acd27f7b57b3c3bc0e85cff1b03714e1b8b03274f161badac38c4So in the first months of 2021 the owner of UTXOs of this address apparently had access to this address' private key and the other involved inputs in above transactions.
Yes, the file is mine. If it was not mine, how could I know the general wallet address?
I'm not convinced because a Bitcoin Core wallet uses a lot of keys and public addresses, not just a single one. And naming a public address with a suitable balance isn't hard at all.
Your passphrase hints for the Truecrypt container are rather insufficient. My question would be: why didn't you document such an important secret?
As n0nce points out, having the hashes isn't quite enough. An attack to crack the Truecrypt container passphrase would also need details how Truecrypt processes the passphrase to get to hash digests. Well, likely hashcat or similar tools know how to deal with cracking Truecrypt containers.
And then if someone manages to crack the Truecrypt passphrase: what about the contained wallet.dat file? Is this protected by a passphrase, too? Is the Bitcoin Core wallet.dat passphrase known?
There are stories of people being thrown to jail permanently for failing to disclose a Truecrypt password. If anything, this showcases the power of a proper password, and Truecrypt can use a cascaded algorithm setup, which means a proper password is just a nightmare to crack. Even if SHA256 got cracked somehow, there would be more to do ahead. Also, Truecrypt was replaced by Veracrypt and is no longer considered safe, so that to me is interesting that people still use TC containers.
As far as the password for the wallet.dat, im assuming that this guy has a known wallet.dat password, otherwise, whoever cracked the wallet.dat, would just take the funds isn't it? or he is naive enough to think that they would crack it, then ask for permission to take the funds? im assuming that's not the case here.