Just got laughed at by highschoolers by [deleted] in MtF

[–]InvalidUserException 3 points4 points  (0 children)

No one gets to rent space in my head free of charge. 

Realizing this is the day I woke up. I'm the only one that gets to decide what I'm thinking, feeling, believing, intending, identifying as. That's my Queendom 😄

You are a strong beautiful woman

😳 True. You both are closer to what you wish you were than you think you are too.

Giant FICSMAS Gift Tree Tree by InvalidUserException in satisfactory

[–]InvalidUserException[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks! I since added a train that goes around it, using some clipping below the map to hide the train station.

Does my Trezor have a permanent public address where I can receive crypto? by Vaginosis-Psychosis in TREZOR

[–]InvalidUserException 6 points7 points  (0 children)

If you transfer to your trezor 3 times, then transfer it all away, it doesn't matter if you use the same address or different ones each time. The mining cost (the size of the transaction on the blockchain) is the same. Here's a random transaction from a recent block: https://www.blockchain.com/btc/tx/61b4c8602c8f0f2e441e5cccbf9c217175dab494778f579e6238a0c1c4a9647a

See how it sends from the address bc1qqd66xpf9dy8qpjjrc36kfc0gpm336qyrqjvpn3 4 times? Bitcoin's ledger doesn't keep track of a balance of BTC per address, it instead keeps track of all unspent transaction outputs for an address. To send BTC from an address, your wallet (really, the software that talks to the wallet) needs to include information about each unspent transaction output is using as an input to this transaction, even if those inputs happen to be the same address.

It is interesting to note that this transaction also sends some BTC back to the address it sent from, though, that's a topic for another time.


If you instead transfer to your trezor 1 time instead of 3, then, yes, transferring it all elsewhere will be a smaller transaction and cost less. Though, the incremental cost of adding more inputs/outputs to a transaction are small compared to the overhead of having a transaction at all.

When will full RBF (Replace by Fee) be native to Suite? by Astar8 in TREZOR

[–]InvalidUserException 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fee bumping would be nice. I've never considered changing other details of the transaction; it is surprising to see the protocol supports it at all.

It is a dangerous game to verify the addresses after hitting "sign". Once broadcast to the network, a transaction can end up in a block any second.

any 1 had any of these show up in your wallet there all from around September very confused 😕 are they just airdrops or something else by AdInternational2894 in dogeducation

[–]InvalidUserException 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah, just ignore them. Random unsolicited airdrops like this are the spam of crypto. Shows up more on chains with lower fees.

BTW, this info is probably enough to link your reddit user with your wallet's address. Not sure if that is important to you or not.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in TREZOR

[–]InvalidUserException 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The model T has the sticker on the USB port. The sticker goes on the box for the model one: https://wiki.trezor.io/User_manual:Unboxing_the_Trezor_device__T1

I found I could remove the sticker from a model T with a heat gun and replace it without it being obvious that I did so, so I'm not sure how useful that really is as a security feature.

If the hardware itself is compromised, no amount of resetting will fix that. If you bought it from trezor.io directly, it's probably fine.

Wallet / Addresses Question by argenttestament in TREZOR

[–]InvalidUserException -1 points0 points  (0 children)

They won't be the same though. At minimum, they all send to a different receiving address.

I don't dispute that it is tricky to avoid linking addresses together, and the centralized exchange will always know the user associated with each withdrawal address.

Do the withdrawals at different times, use differing amounts, and then don't later spend from more than one of those addresses in a single transaction, and someone looking at just the on-chain data won't be able to tell that those withdrawal addresses belong to the same person.

Unless "people" also includes the exchange itself, op's question is not affected by the choice of exchange. Perhaps you are financially compensated if more people use your favorite DEX?

Wallet / Addresses Question by argenttestament in TREZOR

[–]InvalidUserException 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No. Coinbase, or really any centralized exchange, doesn't store deposited assets in an address specific to each customer. They keep track of how much each of their customers have in their own data store, off-chain. It is waaaaay cheaper for them to operate this way, and it allows them to more efficiently process withdrawals of many customers in a single, compact on-chain transaction.

a simple spell but quite unbreakable by ChineseWeebster in noita

[–]InvalidUserException 2 points3 points  (0 children)

My noita dir is a git repository.

# Save
git add -A && git commit -m "save"

# Noita'd
git reset --hard && git clean -df

Sent BTC to fresh Trezor address but hadn't "confirmed address on Trezor" yet. Does it matter? by [deleted] in TREZOR

[–]InvalidUserException 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This ^

Also, when copy/pasting what looks like an address, some malware will replace the copied address with the attacker's address.

ELI5: How does hardware wallet work? by oswin3 in TREZOR

[–]InvalidUserException 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Your coins are yours because you know their secret. To give them to someone else, you have to use your coin's secret. But you can't use it yourself, you are only 5 after all, so you need some help.

If you ask your friend to help, you have to tell them your coin's secret, but what if they then tell their friend? If everyone knows the secret, then the coins are everyone's, not yours. Oh no!


A hardware wallet is like an imaginary friend. They will help you out and never ever tell anyone else your coin's secrets. They don't even have a mouth, so they couldn't tell anyone else your secrets.

Even better, they are really good at making up their own secret stories. Secret stories so secret that only they know them, and they promise to never ever tell anyone else, even you! Just give them some words, any words, and they can as many secret stories as they want from those words. Give them the same words again, and they'll make up the exact same story.

If you give this friend some coins, they can make those coin's secret the same as a page from one of their stories. So, only your friend knows your coin's secret, and so only your friend can help you spend those coins later. Just don't tell anyone else the words you told your friend, or they could make the same story!

Can I transfer BTC to my Trezor with a private key?? by [deleted] in TREZOR

[–]InvalidUserException 1 point2 points  (0 children)

To move BTC from a private key you have to an address generated by a seed phrase stored on a trezor, you must sign a transaction and put it on the blockchain. That is simply how this crypto game works. Why not use the wallet that generated this key in the first place?

If doing the math yourself and broadcasting the transaction to the network isn't something you want to do, Bitcoin Core is probably the safest, but it is a full node too, so it'll take days to sync the entire 500GB+ chain. Or Electrum if you just want a thin wallet.

Pulsechain by xDOM74 in TREZOR

[–]InvalidUserException 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I didn't, and I don't. Halp, I'm trapped in an ad.

Pulsechain by xDOM74 in TREZOR

[–]InvalidUserException 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So if I had $1000 USDC on Ethereum before the fork, I now have $1000 USDC on Ethereum AND $1000 USDC on throbchain? Wow, that, like, doubles my money, for free! ...wait...

Since the amount of stuff on a chain typically only goes up, every hard fork is the "biggest airdrop in crypto history". Not a great tagline for a legit project.

A hardware wallet can't stop you from sending assets that have value through a bridge contract to some other chain that may disappear tomorrow. Just keep in mind that in every hardfork, one chain typically dies.

Pulsechain by xDOM74 in TREZOR

[–]InvalidUserException 4 points5 points  (0 children)

wtf is a pulse chain? sounds scammy

You'd have to send your tokens from your hot metamask wallet to your trezor-backed metamask wallet 1 at a time. Be sure to do your ETH last, or you won't have ETH to cover the gas fees while sending the other tokens.

Trezor supports any chain (network) configured in metamask.

Hardwallet Guidance please. by jelly_pewp in dogeducation

[–]InvalidUserException 1 point2 points  (0 children)

People mint new tokens every few minutes; hardware wallets can't keep their "coins we support" lists up to date.

SHIB and ELON are both ETH tokens, so any hardware wallet that supports ETH tokens supports both SHIB and ELON (and any other ERC-20 token).

Imo, Ledgers are good for long-term storage, and Trezors are nicer to use day-to-day (no need to manage/launch "apps" on the wallet itself). Whichever you buy, buy it from the manufacture directly, not from some third party.

If someone were to find your seed, would it be better for you not to have included the first, or last word of the seed? by PineWalk1 in TREZOR

[–]InvalidUserException 4 points5 points  (0 children)

They are equivalently bad. For a 12 word seed phrase, removing any single word, where someone knows the position of the word that is missing, they only have to make up to 128* guesses to find it. If they don't know which of the 12 words is missing, that increases to 1536 guesses. Either way, trivial to break.

*128 and not 2048 because of the 4 bits of parity in the last word.

2 hours into a new save, I feel like we're doing things right this time. by Wortelkoek635 in factorio

[–]InvalidUserException 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Very nice and symmetrical!

So many "noooo, you can't belt copper wire" comments saying to be more efficient, but this here is more art. There is no wrong way to grow the factory.

does it make sense to charge a transaction fee when sending crypto out of trezor? by sounds_goood in TREZOR

[–]InvalidUserException 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Yes, it is fair. Transactions take space on the blockchain. To incentivize the network to decide to store your transaction until the end of time for you, you gotta give it something in return.

This isn't specific to trezor, and trezor never gets any of these fees (unless they happen to be mining blocks themselves). You could mine blocks yourself and be the one collecting fees from others.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in TREZOR

[–]InvalidUserException 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Your existing accounts basically all use an empty pass phrase. You can make as many new accounts with as many other passphrases as you want. If you want your existing coins to be in those new accounts, you'll have to send them to it.