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RE: I NEED HELP! Can I sell my Byteball Wallet? [Best Discount Price]

in #byteball6 years ago (edited)

Good luck to the buyer ... having to keep his fingers crossed you didn't keep a copy of the backup.

While this may very well be a legit request, I would definitely strongly advice people against buying wallet backup files from others. There's absolutely no way to tell if you get scammed by someone claiming to have uninstalled and deleted the backup after they sent it to you - but turn out not to.

As the saying goes for all crypto: With full control comes full responsibility. If people get cheated, scammed, hacked or looses their funds, there's nobody that can help.

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LOL yeah Ill scam people here... smh

Backup comes with the password of the wallet which is obv changed by the buyer... Means I can't access the wallet even if I had a backup file and to the addition, you cant clone wallets successfully as far as I know... right=? If you want to use wallet on multiple devices you need to use the other option "multisig", not FULL Backup.

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But you are right about

If people get cheated, scammed, hacked or looses their funds, there's nobody that can help.

No, you're wrong, actually. The password is the password for the backup file. You will still have the backup file and know the password you entered for it. This effectively allows you to always use that backup file, regardless of whether someone else also used it or even created a new backup and set another password. It would effectively come down to a race of who first sends the money away from that wallet, since you will both have access to it.

If the person who bought the wallet added even more bytes to his wallet in the meantime, you would actually have control over those as well.

I'm definitely not saying you would do so, but it's only fair to state the obvious risks involved generally if someone buys a wallet backup from someone else. Also, please note that the wallet seed does not restore private assets, tokens, smart contracts or paired devices. For that, a full backup is needed. So only selling the wallet seed would result in the buyer not getting the funds locked on the smart contract.

There's no "safe" way to transfer a smart contract, since it requires the full backup file and that can be kept by the selling party. (again not implying that you would, only speaking generally)

Thank you for the explanation, very much appreciated.

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