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292 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
[[ch11]]
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== Bitcoin Security
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Securing your bitcoins is challenging because bitcoins are
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are not like a balance in a bank account. Your bitcoins are very
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much like digital cash or gold. You've probably heard the expression,
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"Possession is nine-tenths of the law." Well, in Bitcoin, possession is
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ten-tenths of the law. Possession of the keys to spend certain bitcoins is
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equivalent to possession of cash or a chunk of precious metal. You can
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lose it, misplace it, have it stolen, or accidentally give the wrong
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amount to someone. In every one of these cases, users have no recourse
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within the protocol, just as if they dropped cash on a public sidewalk.
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However, the Bitcoin system has capabilities that cash, gold, and bank accounts do
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not. A Bitcoin wallet, containing your keys, can be backed up like any
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file. It can be stored in multiple copies, even printed on paper for
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hard-copy backup. You can't "back up" cash, gold, or bank accounts.
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Bitcoin is different enough from anything that has come before that we
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need to think about securing our bitcoins in a novel way too.
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=== Security Principles
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The core principle in Bitcoin is
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decentralization and it has important implications for security. A
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centralized model, such as a traditional bank or payment network,
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depends on access control and vetting to keep bad actors out of the
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system. By comparison, a decentralized system like Bitcoin pushes the
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responsibility and control to the users. Because the security of the network
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is based on independent verification, the network can be open
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and no encryption is required for Bitcoin traffic (although encryption
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can still be useful).
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On a traditional payment network, such as a credit card system, the
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payment is open-ended because it contains the user's private identifier
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(the credit card number). After the initial charge, anyone with access
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to the identifier can "pull" funds and charge the owner again and again.
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Thus, the payment network has to be secured end-to-end with encryption
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and must ensure that no eavesdroppers or intermediaries can compromise
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the payment traffic, in transit or when it is stored (at rest). If a bad
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actor gains access to the system, he can compromise current transactions
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_and_ payment tokens that can be used to create new transactions. Worse,
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when customer data is compromised, the customers are exposed to identity
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theft and must take action to prevent fraudulent use of the compromised
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accounts.
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Bitcoin is dramatically different. A Bitcoin transaction authorizes only
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a specific value to a specific recipient and cannot be forged.
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It does not reveal any private information, such as the
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identities of the parties, and cannot be used to authorize additional
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payments. Therefore, a Bitcoin payment network does not need to be
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encrypted or protected from eavesdropping. In fact, you can broadcast
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Bitcoin transactions over an open public channel, such as unsecured WiFi
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or Bluetooth, with no loss of security.
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Bitcoin's decentralized security model puts a lot of power in the hands
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of the users. With that power comes responsibility for maintaining the
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secrecy of their keys. For most users that is not easy to do, especially
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on general-purpose computing devices such as internet-connected
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smartphones or laptops. Although Bitcoin's decentralized model prevents
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the type of mass compromise seen with credit cards, many users are not
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able to adequately secure their keys and get hacked, one by one.
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==== Developing Bitcoin Systems Securely
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A critical principle
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for Bitcoin developers is decentralization. Most developers will be
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familiar with centralized security models and might be tempted to apply
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these models to their Bitcoin applications, with disastrous results.
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Bitcoin's security relies on decentralized control over keys and on
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independent transaction validation by users. If you want to leverage
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Bitcoin's security, you need to ensure that you remain within the
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Bitcoin security model. In simple terms: don't take control of keys away
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from users and don't outsource validation.
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For example, many early Bitcoin exchanges concentrated all user funds in
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a single "hot" wallet with keys stored on a single server. Such a design
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removes control from users and centralizes control over keys in a single
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system. Many such systems have been hacked, with disastrous consequences
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for their customers.
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Unless you are prepared to invest heavily in operational security,
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multiple layers of access control, and audits (as the traditional banks
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do) you should think very carefully before taking funds outside of
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Bitcoin's decentralized security context. Even if you have the funds and
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discipline to implement a robust security model, such a design merely
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replicates the fragile model of traditional financial networks, plagued
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by identity theft, corruption, and embezzlement. To take advantage of
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Bitcoin's unique decentralized security model, you have to avoid the
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temptation of centralized architectures that might feel familiar but
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ultimately subvert Bitcoin's security.
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==== The Root of Trust
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Traditional security architecture is based
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upon a concept called the _root of trust_, which is a trusted core used
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as the foundation for the security of the overall system or application.
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Security architecture is developed around the root of trust as a series
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of concentric circles, like layers in an onion, extending trust outward
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from the center. Each layer builds upon the more-trusted inner layer
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using access controls, digital signatures, encryption, and other
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security primitives. As software systems become more complex, they are
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more likely to contain bugs, which make them vulnerable to security
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compromise. As a result, the more complex a software system becomes, the
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harder it is to secure. The root of trust concept ensures that most of
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the trust is placed within the least complex part of the system, and
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therefore the least vulnerable parts of the system, while more complex
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software is layered around it. This security architecture is repeated at
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different scales, first establishing a root of trust within the hardware
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of a single system, then extending that root of trust through the
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operating system to higher-level system services, and finally across
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many servers layered in concentric circles of diminishing trust.
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Bitcoin security
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architecture is different. In Bitcoin, the consensus system creates a
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trusted blockchain that is completely decentralized. A correctly
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validated blockchain uses the genesis block as the root of trust,
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building a chain of trust up to the current block. Bitcoin systems can
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and should use the blockchain as their root of trust. When designing a
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complex Bitcoin application that consists of services on many different
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systems, you should carefully examine the security architecture in order
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to ascertain where trust is being placed. Ultimately, the only thing
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that should be explicitly trusted is a fully validated blockchain. If
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your application explicitly or implicitly vests trust in anything but
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the blockchain, that should be a source of concern because it introduces
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vulnerability. A good method to evaluate the security architecture of
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your application is to consider each individual component and evaluate a
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hypothetical scenario where that component is completely compromised and
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under the control of a malicious actor. Take each component of your
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application, in turn, and assess the impacts on the overall security if
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that component is compromised. If your application is no longer secure
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when components are compromised, that shows you have misplaced trust in
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those components. A Bitcoin application without vulnerabilities should
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be vulnerable only to a compromise of the Bitcoin consensus mechanism,
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meaning that its root of trust is based on the strongest part of the
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Bitcoin security architecture.
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The numerous examples of hacked Bitcoin exchanges serve to underscore
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this point because their security architecture and design fails even
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under the most casual scrutiny. These centralized implementations had
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invested trust explicitly in numerous components outside the Bitcoin
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blockchain, such as hot wallets, centralized databases,
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vulnerable encryption keys, and similar schemes.
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=== User Security Best Practices
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Humans have
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used physical security controls for thousands of years. By comparison,
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our experience with digital security is less than 50 years old. Modern
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general-purpose operating systems are not very secure and not
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particularly suited to storing digital money. Our computers are
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constantly exposed to external threats via always-on internet
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connections. They run thousands of software components from hundreds of
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authors, often with unconstrained access to the user's files. A single
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piece of rogue software, among the many thousands installed on your
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computer, can compromise your keyboard and files, stealing any bitcoins
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stored in wallet applications. The level of computer maintenance
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required to keep a computer virus-free and trojan-free is beyond the
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skill level of all but a tiny minority of computer users.
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Despite decades of research and advancements in information security,
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digital assets are still woefully vulnerable to a determined adversary.
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Even the most highly protected and restricted systems, in financial
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services companies, intelligence agencies, and defense contractors, are
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frequently breached. Bitcoin creates digital assets that have intrinsic
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value and can be stolen and diverted to new owners instantly and
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irrevocably. This creates a massive incentive for hackers. Until now,
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hackers had to convert identity information or account tokens—such as
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credit cards and bank accounts—into value after compromising them.
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Despite the difficulty of fencing and laundering financial information,
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we have seen ever-escalating thefts. Bitcoin escalates this problem
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because it doesn't need to be fenced or laundered; bitcoins are valuable
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by themselves.
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Bitcoin also creates the incentives to improve computer
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security. Whereas previously the risk of computer compromise was vague
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and indirect, Bitcoin makes these risks clear and obvious. Holding
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bitcoins on a computer serves to focus the user's mind on the need for
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improved computer security. As a direct result of the proliferation and
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increased adoption of Bitcoin and other digital currencies, we have seen
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an escalation in both hacking techniques and security solutions. In
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simple terms, hackers now have a very juicy target and users have a
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clear incentive to defend themselves.
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Over the past three years, as a direct result of Bitcoin adoption, we
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have seen tremendous innovation in the realm of information security in
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the form of hardware encryption, key storage and hardware signing devices,
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multisignature technology, and digital escrow. In the following sections
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we will examine various best practices for practical user security.
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==== Physical Bitcoin Storage
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Because most users are far more
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comfortable with physical security than information security, a very
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effective method for protecting bitcoins is to convert them into physical
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form. Bitcoin keys, and the seeds used to create them, are nothing more than long numbers. This means that
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they can be stored in a physical form, such as printed on paper or
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etched on a metal plate. Securing the keys then becomes as simple as
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physically securing a printed copy of the key seed. A seed
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that is printed on paper is called a "paper backup," and
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many wallets can create them.
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Keeping bitcoins
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offline is called _cold storage_ and it is one of the most effective
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security techniques. A cold storage system is one where the keys are
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generated on an offline system (one never connected to the internet) and
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stored offline either on paper or on digital media, such as a USB memory
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stick.
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==== Hardware Signing Devices
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In the long term, Bitcoin security may increasingly take the
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form of tamper-proof hardware signing devices. Unlike a smartphone or desktop
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computer, a Bitcoin hardware signing device only needs to hold keys and
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use them to generate signatures. Without general-purpose software to
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compromise and
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with limited interfaces, hardware signing devices can deliver strong
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security to nonexpert users. Hardware
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signing devices may become the predominant method of storing bitcoins.
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==== Ensuring Your Access
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Although
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most users are rightly concerned about theft of their bitcoins, there is an even
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bigger risk. Data files get lost all the time. If they contain Bitcoin keys,
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the loss is much more painful. In the effort to secure their Bitcoin
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wallets, users must be very careful not to go too far and end up losing
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their bitcoins. In July 2011, a well-known Bitcoin awareness and education
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project lost almost 7,000 bitcoin. In their effort to prevent theft, the
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owners had implemented a complex series of encrypted backups. In the end
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they accidentally lost the encryption keys, making the backups worthless
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and losing a fortune. Like hiding money by burying it in the desert, if
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you secure your bitcoins too well you might not be able to find them again.
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[WARNING]
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====
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To spend bitcoins, you may need to back up more than just your private
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keys or the BIP32 seed used to derive them. This is especially the case
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when multisignatures or complex scripts are being used. Most output
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scripts commit to the actual conditions that must be fulfilled to spend
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the bitcoins in that output, and it's not possible to fulfill that
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commitment unless your wallet software can reveal those conditions to
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the network. Wallet recovery codes must include this information. For
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more details, see <<ch05_wallets>>.
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====
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==== Diversifying Risk
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Would you carry your entire net worth in cash in your wallet? Most
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people would consider that reckless, yet Bitcoin users often keep all
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their bitcoins using a single wallet application. Instead, users should spread the risk
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among multiple and diverse Bitcoin applications. Prudent users will keep only
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a small fraction, perhaps less than 5%, of their bitcoins in an online or
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mobile wallet as "pocket change." The rest should be split between a few
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different storage mechanisms, such as a desktop wallet and offline (cold
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storage).
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==== Multisig and Governance
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Whenever a company or individual stores large amounts of
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bitcoins, they should consider using a multisignature Bitcoin address.
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Multisignature addresses secure funds by requiring more than one
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signature to make a payment. The signing keys should be stored in a
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number of different locations and under the control of different people.
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In a corporate environment, for example, the keys should be generated
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independently and held by several company executives, to ensure no
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single person can compromise the funds. Multisignature addresses can
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also offer redundancy, where a single person holds several keys that are
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stored in different locations.
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==== Survivability
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One important
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security consideration that is often overlooked is availability,
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especially in the context of incapacity or death of the key holder.
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Bitcoin users are told to use complex passwords and keep their keys
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secure and private, not sharing them with anyone. Unfortunately, that
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practice makes it almost impossible for the user's family to recover any
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funds if the user is not available to unlock them. In most cases, in
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fact, the families of Bitcoin users might be completely unaware of the
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existence of the bitcoin funds.
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If you have a lot of bitcoins, you should consider sharing access details
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with a trusted relative or lawyer. A more complex survivability scheme
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can be set up with multisignature access and estate planning through a
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lawyer specialized as a "digital asset executor."
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Bitcoin is a complex new technology that is still being explored by developers. Over
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time we will develop better security tools and practices that are easier
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to use by nonexperts. For now, Bitcoin users can use many of the tips
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discussed here to enjoy a secure and trouble-free Bitcoin experience.
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