Bitcoin Q&A: Is Multi-sig for the Average User?

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  • čas přidán 5. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 40

  • @SatochiCraft
    @SatochiCraft Před 4 lety +21

    Thanks Andreas, as always giving great value.

  • @narwhaltacos2197
    @narwhaltacos2197 Před 3 lety +2

    This should be required viewing for 99.999999% of hodlers. Thanks so much Andreas!

  • @AChainofBlocks
    @AChainofBlocks Před 4 lety +6

    Is everyone else as inspired by these videos as I am??

  • @carousel9325
    @carousel9325 Před 4 lety +7

    Good question. I also wanted to know

  • @mikemcdonald3585
    @mikemcdonald3585 Před 3 lety +1

    Very helpful, helped me think about checking a drift towards increasing complexity

  • @gargleblasta
    @gargleblasta Před rokem

    Good use case for multi sig: inheritance

  • @televolna
    @televolna Před 4 lety +2

    I think that good solution for average user can be hardware wallet with rather long passphrase. So for backup we use our seed + passphrase.

    • @televolna
      @televolna Před 2 lety +1

      @@kotgc7987 if seedphrase and passphrase are stolen, then funds will be stolen too. Don't write you passphrase anywhere, keep it in mind.

    • @kotgc7987
      @kotgc7987 Před 2 lety +1

      @@televolna sorry, memory is a no. Easy to forget and $5 wrench attack will get you. I'm thinking to encrypt the seedphrase and store the decryption process on the cloud.

    • @televolna
      @televolna Před 2 lety

      @@kotgc7987 keep in memory only passphrase, not seed

    • @carlpoppa1788
      @carlpoppa1788 Před rokem +4

      @@kotgc7987 this is bad advice, cloud storage is not secure even if data is encrypted

    • @kotgc7987
      @kotgc7987 Před rokem

      @@carlpoppa1788 true, however a thief having your seedphrase and your cloud access and navigation path/breadcrumb to passphrase may be less risk and a memorised passphrase.

  • @ederrocha1458
    @ederrocha1458 Před 4 lety +3

    Andreas activate the subtitles. Thank you!

  • @ThepoweroftheBitcoinnetwork

    Thanks Andreas

  • @51give
    @51give Před 3 lety

    Excellent suggestions

  • @cryptochannel3449
    @cryptochannel3449 Před 4 lety

    Great video, Andreas!

  • @siddheshb.kukade4685
    @siddheshb.kukade4685 Před rokem

    Thanks

  • @doonit
    @doonit Před 4 lety +1

    I have two things that I don't understand and would love it if you could clarify?
    1. Except for some Zimbabweans, I have never seen any poor people that own bitcoin. Especially now with a major breakdown at hand, how will mass adoption ever happen, especially with reference to the poor who simply cannot afford to buy anything except food?
    2. I'm in South Africa and, even in the good times, our national electricity grid has been at risk of failure. Now, with a depression looming, I'm not confident that my country can maintain the grid. If it goes down completely it will be many months before there can be any hope of it being restored, maybe even years. What good would bitcoin be if there is zero Internet as a result of zero electricity?

    • @CheKohler
      @CheKohler Před 4 lety +2

      doonit you can hold it in cold storage and even split it into multiple paper wallets which you can hand over like you would physical cash!

    • @owenbenjaminshapiro6285
      @owenbenjaminshapiro6285 Před 3 lety

      If you barely have enough money for food, you have nothing to lose since you have nothing to save

    • @narwhaltacos2197
      @narwhaltacos2197 Před 3 lety +3

      I’m reading this a year later…knowing what is happening still in South Africa a year later. No point in trying to address the question…but I feel deep sympathy for doonit, who posted this. When the rain comes down HARD…what hope is there even in pristine money…? Hope you’re still well doonit. Wish you the best mate.

  • @adversecatalyst2190
    @adversecatalyst2190 Před 4 lety

    Thankyou :-)

  • @jpp59
    @jpp59 Před 4 lety +4

    Multisig is too complex for individual. The simplest : 24 mnemonic bip39 with passphrase given to 2 or 3 trusted people (written on paper without the passphrase) with instruction to give to your child at their adulthood and the passphrase (aka 25th word, or extension, or salt) you make sure your children remember... (with instruction to do not talk about it with anybody). And for daily usage no problem to import it in a ledger or trezor.

    • @mriraniniceguy9209
      @mriraniniceguy9209 Před 4 lety +4

      Yeah great idea to involve trusted third parties with your keys after you went into bitcoin because you don’t want Any trusted third parties lol

  • @televolna
    @televolna Před 4 lety +1

    Please add subtitles. Thanks

  • @eirikmurito
    @eirikmurito Před 3 lety +1

    If you lose your money if one of the companies lose one of your keys it sounds safer to just store money in the bank..

  • @3genac
    @3genac Před 3 lety

    The primary need and challenge is permanence, particularly bequeathal -- marginalized to the final minute of the presentation. The cold storage advice doesn't seem to address this challenge. No one has cracked this nut without an authorized agent.
    "Most people don't need that". Is there anyway to defend this with any confidence? I have 2% of my wealth in BTC. When it grows to 10%, will I need it then? I suspect once a major investor loses billions, institutions will resume trusting central authority, particularly the insurance industry, to protect their crypto.

    • @3genac
      @3genac Před 2 lety

      By enlisting a central authority we eschew the libertardian wet dream.

    • @kotgc7987
      @kotgc7987 Před 2 lety

      @@3genac so write a will on a decentralised smart contract then?

    • @3genac
      @3genac Před 2 lety

      @@kotgc7987 Now you're talking. Please provide a detailed guide. Thanks!

    • @kotgc7987
      @kotgc7987 Před 2 lety

      @@3genac Write a will, which discloses where your mnemonic phrase and the mnemonic phrase's passphrase is hidden.

  • @hunterz5129
    @hunterz5129 Před 4 lety

    After halving bitcoin transtion fee increase ....????

    • @mrhandles3
      @mrhandles3 Před 4 lety +1

      most likely because miners fee

    • @bLd321
      @bLd321 Před 4 lety +1

      Why? Less space in block? More transactions to process? These are the factors that determines how long you have to wait for your transaction to process and this determines fee you will have to pay. I will keep transaction fee as low as how long I can wait for my transaction to process. Halving changes nothing. As long as number of transactions stays the same, fee for processing in reasonable time stays the same.

    • @mrhandles3
      @mrhandles3 Před 4 lety

      halving changes everything. Because the rewards half for miners from 12btc to 6.5btc. Miners will slowly charge 12k plus because it will then take 6-12k usd to mine 1 bitcoin.

    • @bLd321
      @bLd321 Před 4 lety +2

      @@mrhandles3 Miners don't set the fee. They can't charge more, because they don't charge you anything. It's you who pay them to have higher priority over other transactions. But if there is space left in a block and all transaction can fit into next block, you can pay 1 satoshi per byte and still your transaction will be processed in next block.

    • @Vention1MGTOW
      @Vention1MGTOW Před 4 lety +5

      If hash rate drops and blocks slow down, fees may get bid up to a higher level. But difficulty will drop again and blocks will to back to 10 min. Only if the demand for transactions overwhelms the available supply do the fees go up.

  • @bitcoin.seit.2016
    @bitcoin.seit.2016 Před 4 lety

    no