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My reddit account got banned as soon as I posted a guide to my own user account page.
Is there any way I could gain trust around this? I wouldn't be able to run it for free forever as GPU time isn't cheap, but I thought asking for whatever donation the user wanted after a successful recovery could offset the costs.
Any thoughts on this? I created a domain specific language for specifying password combinations that took months to get right. I feel like it could be more useful than just being used for my wallet.
--snip--
I've seen people getting banned from specific subreddit, but it's rare to see someone banned from reddit altogether. But looking at
https://support.reddithelp.com/hc/en-us/articles/360045734511-My-account-was-banned-for-violating-Reddit-s-rules, you could try ban appeal. Although it's weird you're only allowed to make an appeal 6 months after being banned.
As for getting trust, i think you could only try sharing your program on different community. Just make sure you explain it clearly. Making it open-source (with open source license) probably can help getting trust faster.
You guys won't probably like what I am about to say.
If all it requires to get a lost bitcoin wallet is the hash then you won't be here, by saying hash do you mean the transaction hash or what? Hash function?
This is very hard to believe.
Hash isn't private key and if you can break into a bitcoin wallet using the hash then we are all in trouble, meaning no bitcoin wallet is safe.
Hash and Private key should have been what users are supposed to held tight and never let go.
Sorry, but it means you're not very familiar with brute-forcing wallet file. In this context, hash represent hashed password used to encrypt/decrypt the wallet
file. After you