You are viewing a single comment's thread from:

RE: Cheap and effective way to store your wallet data (BTC, ETH, LTC etc)

in #bitcoin7 years ago

I understand what you're saying, I actually used Electrum for bitcoin and Parity for Ethereum for a while. These light clients work, but the parity multisig wallet incident scared me, I can't risk my funds with wallets that claim to be secure but occasionally fail with zero liability of their clients. I went back to the official wallets, heavy weight, less functional, but always well tested and they require full node sync.

Sort:  

Again, requiring a full node sync doesn't add any value. It's completely pointless and wastes drive space. Just because something is less functional doesn't mean it doesn't have security vulnerabilities, and if security is your actual concern you should simply run whatever client you want offline. For most people, that's going to be MEW since it's very easy to use and set up offline. It's also going to be orders of magnitude more secure than using any wallet synced to the blockchain since that means it's an online wallet.

Coin Marketplace

STEEM 0.19
TRX 0.13
JST 0.030
BTC 63570.02
ETH 3400.95
USDT 1.00
SBD 2.56