November 12, 2021

Cash out forgotten BTC wallets

Foreword

Usually, when we hear news about how some well-known hacker group hacked this or that crypto exchange or stole several greens from the crypto wallet of some moneybag, images from "Who am I?" Involuntarily appear and it seems that only geniuses who code almost from the cradle.

However, in reality, everything is more mundane and trivial. I will not be mistaken if I say that after reading this article each of you will be able to try your luck and farm a dozen or two kropto-wallets with a balance. Well, if you were born under a lucky star, then it is quite possible that you will be able to hit the jackpot - stumble upon someone's multimillion-dollar fortune!

Attention! The article was written for informational and entertainment purposes only and does not carry a call to action.

Let's start in order

Hacking the Blockchain.

First, you need to generate a Mnemonic code (a mnemonic recovery phrase is a list of words that store all the information needed to recover a Bitcoin wallet).

To do this, go to this site - *click*, select the number of words 12 and click on CREATE.

Copy the resulting phrase and follow this link - https://login.blockchain.com/#/recover

Insert the phrase into the line and click "CONTINUE".

Enter new data for the wallet and click on "RECOVER FUNDS".

If everything was done correctly, then such a message should appear.

In a few seconds we will be transferred to the account itself.

The probability that in this way it will be possible to get an account with a balance is very small, but still there!

Manually (we tested) you can check 50 accounts per hour. For 8 working shift ≈ 400 pcs. But why mess your hands if experienced programmers came up with everything for you:

https://t.me/mining_21_bot

(a whole ecosystem that mines wallets!)

Basically, wallets with a zero balance come across, but if the program finds something with money, then you will definitely notice this:

Profit of our student on the first day (not everyone is so lucky!)

As of the date of this manual writing (12/11/2021) these are: