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196667 No.196667[DELETED]  [Reply] [Original]

http://directory.io/
ALL BITCOIN PRIVATE KEYS HAVE BEEN HACKED

CASH OUT NOW

>> No.196681

Now we just need to find the good ones

>> No.196711

>>196667
Ok go find this address
1F1tAaz5x1HUXrCNLbtMDqcw6o5GNn4xqX

>> No.196721

>>196681
904625697166532776746648320380374280100293470930272690489102837043110636675
sites kek

>> No.196718

>>196667
LMFAO guys the game's over. Bye bye bitcoin.

>> No.196755
File: 14 KB, 880x247, totallyrealz.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
196755

>>196711
Found it!

>> No.196768

Someone make a page scanner that will check all addresses on the page. We can make this a lottery

>> No.196778

http://www.reddit.com/r/Bitcoin/comments/1ruk0z/dont_panic_directoryio_thing_is_fake/

it's just a joke guys, don't panic

>> No.196784

>>196778
Damn, I was about to buy an Ouya

>> No.196806

>>196778

It's not actually fake.

All the private keys are there.

Just that the odds of seeing an active address are 1 in 100 billion or something?

>> No.196816

>>196813

No. It'd be better to mine if anything.

>> No.196813

>>196806
Then with all those computer power to mine btc, won't it be better to use it to find an active one?

>> No.196814

>>196806

You know you can automate things with a computer script, right? Multiple computers can divide the task and achieve it faster too. It's only a matter of time. Fake or not, I would be making a new address right this instant and transfer my bitcoins there.

>> No.196819

>>196806
Pretty much.
Each page generates the keys on the fly.
Iterating over all the pages would take a gorillion eons.

>> No.196826

>>196814

That address would still be there.

All the page does is generate bitcoin addresses based on whatever page you're on.

>> No.196988

>>196814
>I would be making a new address right this instant and transfer my bitcoins there.
then you are in exactly the same scenario as you was before you made a new address retard. You could generate addresses 24 hours a day for the rest of your life and they will all still be in the list somewhere. The reason this is not a threat is because it would take millions of years to actually find those addresses because of the shear amount of them.
To put in in perspective, the amount of water molecules on earth is NOTHING in comparison to the number of btc addresses that can be generated.

>heres a list of numbers between 0000 and 9999
>Oh no better change my pin number

>> No.197032
File: 58 KB, 408x632, 1389444249965.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
197032

>>196667
>yes someone made a quantum computer capable of cracking everything in the domain of bitcoin crypto and did so and published it

No, the US government would just steal the money first.

>> No.197045

Just collect data about the amount of time someone stays on a particular page.
If someone stays for more than a minute, it means they recognize one of the keys.
Free bitcoins!

>> No.197048

>>197045
lol

>> No.197078
File: 19 KB, 475x67, Untitled.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
197078

>>197045

>> No.197148

>>196667
>"Look, private keys!"
>shows wallet addresses
>in2trash.jpg

>> No.197166

>>197148
look at the left column
lern 2 read

>> No.197184

>Implying this is real
>Implying that site isn't going to steal my Wallet.dat

Into the trash OP goes.

>> No.197198

It's no fake.
There's a chance for a private key for an address that contain coin to have been posted on that site. We only need to find it. If someone could index every single page and search for the address he needs it would be much easier.

>> No.197206

>>197198
this
why can't the site owner just compile all the addresses into one huge list

>> No.197216

>>197206
because it would take thousands of years, You're massively underestimating the amount of keys that can exist.

>> No.197217
File: 13 KB, 318x335, Joke[1].jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
197217

look at the number of pages you fucks

this is basically akin to a for-loop that iterates over all possible private keys

it would take the energy of a trillion suns to generate all those pages

>> No.197222

>>197206
Because the whole list is around 100GB

>> No.197235

>>197216
So who had to power to generate all those addresses?

>> No.197238

>And your estimate of how long a brute force attack on SHA-256 would take is wrong, it isn't centuries, it is billions and billions of years, minimum. If you converted the entire mass of the sun into energy, and used all of that energy to increment a counter using the absolute limit of physics for minimum energy used to flip a bit, you'd get to around 2225. You'd need 231 suns of similar mass to finish just iterating through all of the possible inputs. So, billions of stars, or trillions or quadrillions if you want to actually perform the hashes too.

>all these people thinking its possible to just 'quicky make a list of all of them'

>> No.197243

>>197235
they aren't pre-generated dumbass, the page is generated on your computer when you click the link.
And before you say "write a script to generate every page" see >>197238

>> No.197250

>>197243
>implying I knew this
Why are you so rude?

>> No.197256
File: 10 KB, 1226x803, bitcoinaddresses.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
197256

>>197243
Here's a nifty chart to show just how many addresses there are.

>> No.197263

>>197250
>Why are you so rude?
Sorry buddy, your on 4chan/the internet

>> No.197267

>>197263
>implying people can't be normal on the internet
How old are you?
12?

>> No.197274

>>197267
>implying people are ever normal on the internet

>> No.197277 [DELETED] 

>>197256

What the fuck? They might as well compare that shit to the width of the universe in planck length.

>> No.197522
File: 67 KB, 629x540, 1377255465709.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
197522

>>197256

Omg I saw this chart months ago and I've been looking for it ever since. Thank you based anon.

>> No.197588

>>197522
Lucky kid. I wish my DS Lite weren't broken.

>> No.197873

I'm a little confused, let's say I actually find an address that is in use and has bitcoins on it. I obviously have the address and private key, so where would I go from there in order to steal them?

>> No.198049

bump

>> No.198104

>>197873

Import the private key into your wallet.

>> No.198116
File: 108 KB, 1183x689, import.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
198116

>>197873
>>198049
You import it into a wallet and send them to another address.
Practically all wallet implementations have a feature for importing private keys.
I've also used brainwallet.org's transaction generator for quick sweeping of funds from a PK.

>> No.199713

go to google
type the following to make a custom search:
site:directory.io "[desired address here]"
enjoy having the private key. I did this with several rich addresses, I now have 6000BTC and I don't plan to stop.

>> No.199786

>It took a lot of computing power to generate this database. Donations welcome: 1Bv8dN7pemC5N3urfMDdAFReibefrBqCaK

everyone who thinks this is legid is a confirmed retard!

>> No.199982

>>199713
I can just steal those 6000 back, kek

>> No.200017

>>199713
Pages are generated on the fly when requested.
It would take google more than the life of the universe to cache all the pages.

>> No.200067

>>200017
If google wanted to, they would be able to cache every single page, regardless of what you think is possible.

>> No.200104

>>199786
lol of course

it just steals your private key, but since most don't know how to enter it anyway, it's not a big deal

however... this is illegal and OP should be permabanned

>> No.200158

>>200104
>this is illegal
It is and has always been possible and perfectly fine for anyone to enter any private key into their wallet to see the balance.