• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Idelto

Cryptocurrency news website

  • About
  • Monthly analysis
    • August 2019
    • July 2019
    • June 2019
  • Bitcoin/Ethereum
  • How to invest in cryptocurrencies
  • News

multisig

Video: Securing Bitcoin With Zach Herbert Of Foundation Devices

24/11/2020 by Idelto Editor

YouTube Video

Listen To This Episode:

  • Apple
  • Spotify
  • Google
  • Libsyn
  • Overcast

On this episode of the Bitcoin Magazine Podcast, host Christian Keroles and Zach Herbert, the CEO and co-founder of Foundation Devices, sit down to discuss the company’s launch and its first product, the Passport hardware wallet.

During the conversation, Keroles and Herbert dive into the design editions for the Passport as well as Herbert’s ideas about multisig, hardware wallets in general, Bitcoin mass adoption, user safety and more.

Topics discussed in this episode include:

  • Foundation devices’ outlook
  • The timeline for Passport
  • Geeking out over Bitcoin multisig security
  • The use of QR codes vs. Micro SD cards
  • Why the specific design choices for Foundation Devices were made
  • What it’s going to take to get Grandma comfortable with using multisig
  • Ledger email hacks
  • Why Herbert hates seed phrases

The post Video: Securing Bitcoin With Zach Herbert Of Foundation Devices appeared first on Bitcoin Magazine.

Filed Under: Bitcoin Magazine, bitcoin magazine podcast, English, foundation devices, Hardware wallet, multisig, Podcast, Privacy & security, Video

Multisig Coordination Software Nunchuk Releases Its Code

13/11/2020 by Idelto Editor

Recently-launched Bitcoin wallet Nunchuk announced today that it is making its application library, libnunchuk, open source and available to the public.

Nunchuk describes its mission as “the proliferation of multisig” and attempts to make multisig wallet security easier to achieve by offering a product that integrates some of the latest developments around partially-signed bitcoin transactions (PSBTs) and descriptor language.

“In the early days of Bitcoin, wallet vendors were often incompatible with one another, which complicated multisig setups,” according to an article from Nunchuk’s Hugo Nguyen. “Nunchuk treats descriptors and PSBTs as first-class citizens. The consequence is that you can use Nunchuk with many different hardware vendors, or easily recover a multisig wallet created by Nunchuk on other wallet software such as core.”

In an announcement about the code release shared with Bitcoin Magazine, Nunchuk explained that much of its library is built on Bitcoin Core, leveraging all of the robust advantages that this brings.

“Nunchuk’s architecture differs from other wallets’ for a number of reasons. But a major one is our decision to heavily reuse Bitcoin Core code,” according to the release. “The Nunchuk library creates a higher abstraction on top of Bitcoin Core’s inner building blocks, while reusing much of its logic such as: transaction and signature verification, PSBT, output descriptor and Branch-and-Bound coin selection algorithm.”

Additionally, the announcement indicated that the library offers hardware support, wallet management, encryption and minimal dependencies. 

“Nunchuk works out of the box with any server running Electrum protocol v1.4, including GetUmbrel, electra and ElectumX,” per the announcement. “TOR proxy can also be enabled for improved privacy.”

The post Multisig Coordination Software Nunchuk Releases Its Code appeared first on Bitcoin Magazine.

Filed Under: Bitcoin Magazine, English, multisig, nunchuk, Wallets

Video: How to Create a Multisig Wallet With Caravan By Unchained Capital

16/07/2020 by Idelto Editor

Bitcoin multisig wallets can enable more secure custody of your bitcoin, adding redundancy and avoiding a single point of failure in the number of keys necessary to authorize a spend. One new tool for utilizing multisig is Caravan from Unchained Capital.

With Caravan, Unchained Capital has created a free and open-source tool allowing you to spin up multisig wallets and addresses and spend from them. In the video above, Bitcoin Magazine’s Christian Keroles walks you through how to set up a multisig wallet with Caravan and how to spend from the wallet, along with explaining some of the benefits and nuances of Bitcoin multisig wallet security unique to Caravan.

The idea of Caravan is to make bitcoin multisig custody safer and easier to use. There are several things to be aware of before getting started: 

Caravan is stateless and does not store data, so you will need to be prepared to store the created wallet’s extended public keys and BIP32 paths and addresses. Caravan makes this easy with a simple download. Caravan is also quite modular. You can choose up to seven keys to include in the multisignature and also adjust the quorum (number of signatures needed to sign a transaction) to whatever you like (e.g., 2-of-3, 3-of-5 or 3-of-7 signatures are needed, etc.). It also supports pay-to-script addresses, SegWit addresses and the P2SH-P2WSH address to bridge non-SegWit and SegWit-enabled addresses. 

Christian provides a step-by-step tutorial on how to create and use a Caravan wallet along with a visual walkthrough. Basic steps include:

Step 1: Visit Caravan at caravanmultisig.com and click on “Wallet” to begin building your multisig wallet

Step 2: Configure your multisig Quorum settings with up to seven keys

Step 3: Select your wallet address type

Step 4: Customize your wallet name and key names

Step 5: Export the key information from your wallets

Step 6: Confirm your xpub information and click “confirm” to create your wallet

He also provides a step-by-step tutorial on how to spend from your Caravan multisig wallet:

Step 1: Click on the “Send” tab in the Caravan wallet interface

Step 2: Paste the address or addresses you want to send to

Step 3: Set your fee rate (sats/byte)

Step 4: Input the amount you wish to send or click “Max” to send your entire wallet balance

Step 5: Click “Preview Transaction”

Step 6: If the transaction details look good, click “Sign Transaction”

Step 7: Sign with your independent hardware wallets

Step 8: Click “Broadcast Transaction”

Of course, the video tutorial above provides much more detail and a visual walkthrough for those looking to access multisig custody through Caravan. Be sure to watch it and subscribe to Bitcoin Magazine’s YouTube page for more helpful Bitcoiner walkthroughs.

The post Video: How to Create a Multisig Wallet With Caravan By Unchained Capital appeared first on Bitcoin Magazine.

Filed Under: Bitcoin Magazine, caravan, English, multisig, Unchained Capital, Video, Wallets

Guarda Wallet Launches Multisignature Functionality for Bitcoin

13/04/2020 by Idelto Editor

Guarda Wallet Launches Multisignature Functionality for Bitcoin

Guarda​ has recently become the first multi-currency crypto wallet to offer support for Multisignature. Multisignature (also known as Multisig) wallets make it possible for two or more users to have access to the funds.

Contrary to the usual single-key addresses, Multisig wallets need several parties to sign the transactions – the signatures are generated with the use of different private keys. Multisignature wallets are useful for those willing to co-manage cryptocurrency funds.This way, several parties can create a shared wallet and manage transactions with mutual consensus.

Besides being a tool for enabling crypto transactions for groups of people, Multisig can also be an extra protection tool for those concerned with password loss or cryptocurrency theft.

Making Multisignature creation possible within a lightweight multi-currency wallet is no easy task – Guarda Wallet team, joined by ​Whales Heaven​, were ready to take this challenge and make Multisig go live. The main reason for enabling Multisig was community feedback that pushed the development.

Guarda is not planning to stop on having Multisig for BTC – the team is already working on getting Ethereum Classic ETC (currency chosen by a community-run poll), Ethereum ETH, Bitcoin Cash and a wide range of other coins on board for Multisignature.

“We are here to offer wallet functionality yet unheard of – this is why expansion and having as many cryptocurrency management features is crucial for Guarda. Joined byWhales Heaven, we are enabling Multisignature – something that multi-currency wallets have not been offering yet. Adding Multisig is absolutely dictated by the community demand and we’re happy to offer our services!” – Paul, CEO Guarda Wallet.

If you want to know more about creating and using a Multisig wallet, you can watch a video tutorial on Guarda Wallet on YouTube or check the news on social networks.

Contact Email Address
[email protected]

Supporting Link
http://guarda.co

 

‘This is a press release. Readers should do their own due diligence before taking any actions related to the promoted company or any of its affiliates or services. Bitcoin.com is not responsible, directly or indirectly, for any damage or loss caused or alleged to be caused by or in connection with the use of or reliance on any content, goods or services mentioned in the press release.

The post Guarda Wallet Launches Multisignature Functionality for Bitcoin appeared first on Bitcoin News.

Filed Under: Bitcoin, BTC, cryptocurrency, English, ETC, ether, Guarda, multisig, multisignature, News Bitcoin, Press release, Wallet, Whales Heaven

With Open-Source Caravan Wallet, Unchained Wants to Make Multisig Mainstream

13/11/2019 by Idelto Editor

Austin-based Bitcoin financial service provider Unchained Capital just unveiled its newest multisignature wallet tool.

Revealed exclusively to Bitcoin Magazine in anticipation of the launch, Caravan is the latest tool in Unchained Capital’s suite of bitcoin investor products. Like the Collaborative Custody that came before it, Caravan is a multisignature bitcoin wallet, meaning it requires multiple devices/parties to sign off on a transaction before it is sent. 

Unlike its predecessor, though, which relies on Unchained Capital to act as one of the signatories, Caravan cuts out Unchained as a counterparty. The multisig option can either be completely trustless (i.e., involve only a single user) or involve multiple parties. Additionally, it’s also completely open source, contrary to the private Collaborative Custody.

Introducing Caravan

“Caravan is a stateless, open source and flexible multisig coordinator that integrates with your hardware or software keys and your bitcoin node or a block explorer. Caravan makes it easy to build and spend from multisig addresses right in your web browser,” a press release shared with Bitcoin Magazine reads.

The browser-based wallet makes use of the BIP 67 standard for key ordering and BIP 32 for derivation paths for public keys. It’s compatible with Ledger and Trezor hardware wallets, along with Hermit, a command-line wallet developed by Unchained Capital.

“Caravan also accepts public keys and signatures as text, so can be used manually with almost any wallet or key,” the press release reads.

Caravan is also quite modular. You can choose up to seven keys to include in the multisignature and also adjust the quorum (number of signatures needed to sign a transaction) to whatever you like (e.g., 2-of-3, 3-of-5 or 3-of-7 signatures are needed, etc.). It also supports pay-to-script addresses, SegWit addresses and the P2SH-P2WSH address to bridge non-SegWit and SegWit-enabled addresses. 

To reach network consensus, you can point Caravan at your own node or, if you’re not running your own node, the application will default to blockstream.info to make sure your wallet is in sync with the Bitcoin blockchain. 

“Caravan specializes in one thing: coordinating multisignature addresses, meaning that it is the most streamlined multisig tool available,” Parker Lewis, a partner at Unchained Capital, told Bitcoin Magazine. “It’s highly flexible at multisig, meaning you can adjust quorum sizes on the fly, build quorums by pasting in public keys, switch public keys around in different orders and customize BIP 32 paths you use. But it outsources key management and consensus to hardware wallets and Bitcoin Core or blockstream.info.”

Caravan Wants to “Lower the Bar” for Multisignature

Other multisignature wallet providers, such as Casa and Blockstream, act as a counterparty for their clients to sign off on transactions if needed. Unchained Capital’s Collaborative Custody vaults work this way, but there’s obvious, counterparty risk involved.

“What happens if the app or the site goes down? What happens if they’re no longer there?” Lewis asked.

Now, open-source options certainly exist for users to recover a multisignature wallet (such as Electrum, Ciphrex and Armory), but in Lewis’ words, “there’s also a reason why people aren’t doing it, and it’s because those tools aren’t easy.”

“The options that exist today for an individual to access and interact with an open-source multisignature wallet, which is typically something like Electrum, are still very challenging for normal individuals,” Lewis continued. “Anyone who is sophisticated enough to use a hardware device can use Caravan. It lowers the bar.”

Bitcoin Magazine reached out to Electrum for comment on the wallet’s UX/UI, but did not hear back by the time of publication.

He views Caravan as a complement to Unchained Capital’s use of vaults or any existing multisignature option that relies on a third party. If the access points to these services go down, then the bitcoin user (so long as the user controls, say, 2-of-3 keys) can use Caravan as a fallback. 

But what happens if Unchained Capital folds and you can’t access its instance of the Caravan browser wallet? The source code is on GitHub, meaning anyone can fork it or any coder/company can integrate it into their own services. Moreover, you can run a local instance of the browser wallet from the GitHub code, Unchained Capital’s director of product marketing, Phil Geiger, told Bitcoin Magazine. It also has a desktop wallet in the works.

Carvan’s end game is to make multisignature security more accessible and streamlined for technical and nontechnical users alike. By using BIP 67 for address ordering and BIP 32 for derivation paths, Unchained Capital believes it is using the latest and most robust “standards and rules that the community can rally behind and follow [for multisig wallets],” Geiger said.

Part of this rallying cry is open-sourcing the code, so that Unchained Capital can collaborate with hardware wallet manufacturers and other companies to standardize the multisignature process and make its device agnostic. 

“We hope that wallet manufacturers that want their hardware wallets to be compatible with multisig will use Caravan as the first step toward integration,” Lewis told us. “They just need to implement the appropriate subclasses in the unchained-wallets library.”

If you would like to demo Caravan while it is still in beta, you can do so through Unchained Capital by sending the company a request, or you can run a local instance on your browser by running the source code.

The post With Open-Source Caravan Wallet, Unchained Wants to Make Multisig Mainstream appeared first on Bitcoin Magazine.

Filed Under: Bitcoin Magazine, caravan, English, multisig, Privacy & security, Unchained Capital, Wallets

  • Page 1
  • Page 2
  • Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Archives

Recents articles

  • Venezuelan President Maduro Promises 2021 Will Be the Year to Boost Usage of Petro
  • $100 Swaps: Ethereum Dex Volumes Saw $39 Billion Last Month Despite ‘Insane’ Trading Fees
  • New Jersey Gym Claims State Seized $173K From Bank, Owner Discusses Cryptocurrency Solutions With Tucker Carlson
  • The Sudden, Unexpected End of Crypto Tribalism
  • Argentine Billionaire Marcos Galperin Says Bitcoin a ‘Better Store of Value Than Gold’ as Officials Plan to Print More Pesos
  • Crypto Exchange Owner Sentenced to 10 Years in Prison for Multimillion-Dollar Scheme to Defraud Americans
  • Exploring Drivechain, A Miner-Secured Bitcoin Sidechain
  • Man Accidentally Threw Away Hard Drive With 7,500 Bitcoins, Offers City $72 Million to Search Landfill

© 2021 · Idelto · Site design ONVA ONLINE