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Re: Don't buy "wallet.dat" files with lost passwords. EXCHANGE THEM!
by
Pacossii
on 19/05/2025, 14:55:44 UTC
The 4000 BTC wallet is a fake

How do you know?

Hello everyone, especially you who created the thread. 

First of all, thank you for sharing all the wallets, but I believe that more than 95% of the published wallets are fake, and I'll tell you why: 

I've been working on deciphering wallets for almost two years now. I've managed to unlock several wallets from other clients (always real ones, not ones found on the Internet) because they provided me with clues, and for me, that's a great success. These here are practically impossible to crack because no one would ever publish a **wallet.dat** file with all the clues for just a few euros—it’s simply impossible. 

The scammer behind this is, logically, just that—a scammer. They are not interested in helping anyone but themselves. That’s why they either publish a fake **.dat** file or a real **.dat** file BUT with false clues. 

How do I know the clues are fake if I haven’t managed to open the wallet? Well, a few weeks ago, I met the real and original owner of the wallet containing 340 BTC online. 

It was pure luck since I get contacted by many people, but this person explained that he was the genuine owner. I asked why I should believe him, as many try to deceive me with that claim. So, we connected via Google Meet, he shared his screen, and he showed me an email he received in 2010 with the wallet file named **"wallet.dat"**. The email description stated that it contained 340 BTC, which at the time was worth only $15 or $20, and it was sent for a specific reason that I won’t disclose. 

This email was sent to him by the original owner, meaning someone created the account and password, and this wallet was used as a payment method for another person. Fortunately, I was able to meet both people during the call since they are friends, and they confirmed 100% that the clue circulating online regarding the 340 BTC wallet is an absolute, total, and complete lie—it’s entirely made up. Therefore, the **.dat** file circulating on the Internet is most likely fake as well. The original **.dat** file we have shows in its "properties" that it was created in 2010, meaning it's the real one. 

They lost the password because it was something they used only for that specific moment and for a reason I also won’t disclose, and they never remembered it again. 

Why am I writing this message on this forum? Why am I wasting time doing this when I have the real creators of the wallets who can provide me with unlimited clues? They already have, and we are creating multiple dictionaries, and we believe we are getting close. However, after discussing it with them, we concluded that we need to post this message to find the REAL person who first received the wallet from my client. 

We need the REAL person who originally received this **.dat** file to contact me at **pacossii105@gmail.com**, because the original owner told me that seeing the email he used to send the file might help him remember the password. 

We talked about this, and at first, I didn’t understand, but it turns out he doesn’t remember the email he used because he had many. Seeing that email would remind him of the exact theme and certain clues related to the password. The theme is something only he understands—the email itself is not part of the password. 

I encourage the real person—the first person who received this **.dat** file back in 2013 or 2014 (which is when it was shared with the world, a mistake on their part, I must say)—to come forward. 

This is not a lie, this is not a bluff, this is 100% real. 

We would appreciate it if you contact me privately with that first email where my client explained the situation and the exact email he used. We know that scammers change the clues so that no one can ever solve it—this has been 100% confirmed, at least in this case. By extrapolating, I assume it’s the same for the others. 

As a token of appreciation—because we know this is an effort for everyone—we are offering **5% of the 340 BTC** to the REAL person who contacts me with my client’s original email. 

Since we also know that this message may never reach that person, we are offering **2.5%** to anyone who gives us the contact information of that person or provides a different clue. We **do** know which are the real clues, so don’t come to us with lies. 

Thank you very much for reading.

Hello everyone again,

I'm very glad to know that the message I sent, and which I'm now replying to, was read by so many people, because I’ve received quite a few emails from different individuals. I want to make it clear that everything I said is absolutely and completely true. As I mentioned before, I was lucky, thanks to my profession (I'm an engineer specialized in data and systems) and being deeply involved in the world of cryptocurrencies and wallet recovery, to meet online the creator and owner of the wallet with the 340 BTC.

As I said, the wallet that is circulating online is completely fake, just like all the ones scammers are selling, it’s fake. The real one is held by a person or group of people who are probably trying to unlock it, but once again, let me repeat this here in case they eventually give up:

That wallet is COMPLETELY IMPOSSIBLE to brute-force, and even less so with a dictionary attack. The reason is that my client (the owner of the 340 BTC) has given me some clues about the password and, apart from the fact that it’s very long because it’s a full phrase, it’s not in English. It's in a language that very few people speak, and it includes capital letters, numbers, and symbols, and again, it is NOT IN ENGLISH.

This means that even if you have tens of thousands of GPUs, you won’t be able to find the actual password. But my client knows exactly what password he used because, back then, he used the same phrase for everything, and he has very strong clues, and I have the technical skills to open it.

340 BTC is a lot of money, which is why, as we said in the previous message, the reward offer is still valid and will remain valid: a percentage for anyone who helps us find the person who has the real wallet, the one who contacted my client back in 2014, tricked him, and kept the wallet. We’re not angry; we’re not looking to argue or cause trouble. We just want to recover it and, once we unlock it, which we can do, we will gladly give a small percentage to the person who helped us. We don’t mind losing 20 or 30 BTC in rewards if we still keep 300 BTC for ourselves.

Please, if you don’t know which wallet this is, or if you have a version of the 340 BTC wallet that you bought online, DO NOT CONTACT US. There are too many scammers and rude people who have emailed me saying things like:

How do I know your client is real?

How do I know the wallet is fake?
bla bla bla...

We don’t want to waste time. I already explained that I had a very long and detailed call with my client in which he explained why he’s the real owner. He showed me his face, his voice, his computer, screenshots of the real wallet properties from 14 years ago, the purchase transaction in his email, absolutely everything. I’ve spent years in systems engineering and wallet decryption. It’s 100% real. We talk every week. It’s him. But we don’t have the real wallet he sent to someone in 2014.

Please, if you're reading this and you have the actual 340 BTC wallet, contact me (pacossii105@gmail.com), because the three of us can be millionaires.

A quick reminder for the person holding the real 340 BTC wallet and who is afraid to come forward:
"100% of zero is still zero."

Best regards,

Paco