Thursday, April 16, 2015

Best practices for using & securing bitcons alan reiner

Best practices for using & securing bitcons alan reiner


bitcoinconfny14





Transcript

  • 1. Best Practices for Using and Securing Bitcoins Alan Reiner Founder & CEO Armory Technologies, Inc. 07 April, 2014 Inside Bitcoins Conference, NYC April 7-8, 2014 © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 2. List of Topics • Introduction • Bitcoin storage methods • Bitcoin basics • The marriage of cryptography and money • Security practices • The future of Bitcoin best practices Learn to hold your own Bitcoins and let the power of decentralized money shine! © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 3. Who Am I? • Alan Reiner – “etotheipi” on the bitcointalk.org • Mathematician, Statistician, SW Developer – With a sprinkling of cryptography and data mining • Have been part of the Bitcoin community since 2011 – Contribute to documentation, standards, security discussions, etc, on the “Development & Technical Discussion” forum • A huge nerd! (you have to be to do what I do) – Sub-category: “ultra-paranoid crypto-nerd” © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 4. What is Armory? • Armory Bitcoin Wallet is a free, open-source desktop application for securing Bitcoins yourself – One of four such applications featured on bitcoin.org • Known for “security at all costs” – Sometimes “convenience” is one of those costs... – Currently a tool tailored to advanced/power users – Recently funded, will develop beginner's interface
  • 5. What is Armory? • Even after two years, Armory is still one of the only ways for non-experts to use “cold storage” – Sign transactions from an air-gapped computer • Also innovated many other features – Manage multiple wallets at different security levels – Wallets only have to be backed up one time – Printable paper backups (with fragmenting!) – Multi-signature transactions! • Not for Beginners! – Need Bitcoin-Qt running in background (for security!) – Need to download blockchain – Lots of advanced features Armory was created because these best practices were not available elsewhere © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 6. Bitcoin Basics • Bitcoin has the potential to revolutionize payments – The same way email changed written communications • Bitcoin is complicated – But it will get easier... hopefully • Bitcoin creates both tremendous opportunities and tremendous risks – Educate yourself about Bitcoin to mitigate the risks (If you are using Bitcoin to remove third-parties from the equation, you have to take over the responsibilities of those third-parties!) • Positive: Take control of your own money (and save)! • Negative: Take control of your own money (and lose it)! © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 7. Why Bitcoin? • Show me another payment system that you can pay someone $10,000,000 USD: – To and from anywhere in the world – 24/7 without restrictions – Nearly instantaneously – Irreversible – With $0.00 in fees* – Can't be frozen or seized (without direct access to your wallet) • Bitcoin is not perfect, but it certainly is powerful! • There is no other payment system like this! • If only we could make it safe and usable... *Certain types of transactions may require fees, but it rarely exceeds $0.01 USD. © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 8. Why Bitcoin? • Decentralized – Not controlled by any one entity: run by all users of the system simultaneously! • Limited Supply – There will only ever be 21,000,000.00000000 Bitcoins – The entire schedule of Bitcoin generation was announced in 2009 and cannot be changed – Predetermined inflation, no printing/debasing • Secure! (theoretically) – Built from standard, trusted crypto algorithms Bitcoin shares many of the same properties as gold (no one issues gold, the supply is limited, easy to identify, fungible, durable) © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 9. • With Bitcoin, now “data” is “money” – And “money” is “data” – A 32-byte secret number can control $billions – Raises the stakes of computer and network security – Money now stored directly on phone, computer, paper, etc Bitcoin Storage Options • Store Bitcoin yourself + Full control over your money (and its security) + Cannot be seized or stolen if secured properly - It's easy to lose 32 bytes if you're careless! • Let someone else hold your Bitcoin + May be more diligent about security than you - May hold BTC properly but use poor user auth - Counterparty risk - No Few Bitcoin insurance options © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 10. Third-Party Risk • The history of Bitcoin is filled with users trusting third-parties to hold their money - Most Bitcoin services have no FDIC-equivalent Date Service Service Type BTC Lost / Stolen USD Value (at time of loss) June 2011 Mt. Gox Exchange 2,000 $47,000 June 2011 MyBitcoin Wallet 79,000 $1,100,000 May 2012 Bitcoinica (#1) Exchange 38,000 $91,000 July 2012 Bitcoinica (#2) Exchange 40,000 $305,000 Sep 2012 Bitfloor Exchange 24,000 $250,000 Oct 2013 Inputs.io Wallet 4,100 $1,200,000 Nov 2013 GBL (China) Exchange 4,100 $4,100,000 Feb 2014 Mt. Gox Exchange 850,000 $500,000,000 Mar 2014 Flexcoin Wallet 900 $600,000 © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 11. Holding Your Own Bitcoin • Holding your own is like harnessing fire – Can be extremely useful... and dangerous! – Keep your fires small until you are experienced • Sometimes the biggest threat to users is themselves – Users are not used to truly irrecoverable data! – Not everyone makes backups – No one expects their hardware to fail Educate yourself, learn the tools, learn the risks, and experiment (with small amounts) © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 12. Holding Your Own (cont) • Most users should not be holding life-changing amounts of Bitcoin themselves • Most users should not be trusting third-parties to protect life-changing amounts of BTC for them • Wait... so, what are users supposed to do ?!? • Bitcoin is still the Wild West of money • People like me are building safer tools & infrastructure – But we're not done yet Answer: Most users should not be putting life- changing amounts of money into Bitcoin yet! © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 13. Cryptography & Bitcoin A Short, Non-Technical Introduction © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 14. Public-Private Key Crypto • On the internet, there are two main concerns: – Privacy of communications (encrypt & decrypt) – Authenticity of communications (sign & verify) • Bitcoin protocol does not use encryption – The Bitcoin protocol only uses “authentication” – “Are you authorized to move this money?” • All users create a private key (secret) and a public key (distributed) © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 15. Public and Private Keys • Think of Bitcoin as a decentralized, public bank - is like a bank account number - is the signing authority on that bank account • All users make keypairs for “account” management - give to payers to deposit money in your “account” - keep it secret so only you can authorize payments (it is a pen with special ink needed to write and sign checks) A Bitcoin address is basically just a public key: Such as: “1A1zP1eP5QGefi2DMPTfTL5SLmv7DivfNa” © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 16. Example Network • All Bitcoins have a public “unlock” condition • Most coins have a simple unlock condition: “Here's a public key, only a signature from the owner can authorize moving the Bitcoins” • If you have the private key, you can create those signatures! (so your wallet includes them in your balance) © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 17. A Bitcoin Transaction Bitcoin might make a lot more sense after this demo... © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 18. Initial Conditions • Assume the Bitcoin network has 21 coins • All coins are locked using public keys A, B and C (so far) • Alice and Bob have all the private keys associated with those coins (and a couple extra unused keys) © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 19. Bitcoin Transactions © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 20. Bitcoin Transactions © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 21. Who owns what? © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 22. Payment Request • Bob will request 4 BTC from Alice • Bob's wallet will select unused private key E, and then create a payment address (based on the public key E) • Bob sends the address to Alice requesting payment © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 23. Create Transaction • Alice's wallet selects some coins that she knows she can sign for (at least 4 BTC) • She will use the 6 BTC associated with A (think of it like a $6 bill) • Alice creates a transaction spending the 6 BTC – The software selects an unused key (D) to send the 2 BTC back to herself (change) Note: The change-back-to-self process is transparent to the user. All wallet software “hides” those details because they are confusing and irrelevant to most users. © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 24. Bitcoin Transactions • Alice uses private key A to sign the transaction • The signature is mathematically linked to every detail of the transaction – If the transaction changes at all, the signature will break (the math stops working) © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 25. Bitcoin Transactions • Alice “broadcasts” the transaction to the Bitcoin network • Users of the network verify: – The 6 BTC is unspent – The sig corresponds to public key A – The sig is valid for this particular transaction © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 26. Final Condition • The original 6-BTC bill is destroyed and 2 new bills totaling 6 BTC created • All users update their databases © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 27. What Have We Learned? • Private keys let you “unlock” and “re-lock” coins under other public keys (i.e. send to others) • Signatures are mathematically linked to the signed data – Handwritten sigs can be (maliciously) transplanted between documents. Bitcoin signatures cannot. • Public keys let you: – Receive money – See available coins/balance • Transactions usually have 2 parts (payment & change) – The change is handled automatically and transparently • Wallets contain a lot of private keys – Uses a new key for every receiving operations © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 28. • Now we can appreciate “cold storage” (aka “offline wallets”) – Only public keys are required to receive payments and verify transactions – Private keys are only required to move the coins Cold Storage It is possible to keep the private keys on an offline computer and receive money to it using the public keys Armory was designed to do exactly this! It is the gold standard of wallet security best practices © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 29. Security Best-Practices (for varying levels of paranoia) © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 30. Security vs. Convenience • Nearly all system become more inconvenient as you increase security! – The easiest systems are usually the least secure! – To do security right, expect to be inconvenienced • A lot of users don't have the patience for this – Honestly, this is why Bitcoin may not be ready for primetime! If you're going to hold a lot of Bitcoin it's worth sacrificing some convenience to protect yourself © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 31. GPG-Verify Your Installers • Risks: – You download installers from a malicious website – An attacker tampered with the installers on the real website – The installers are replaced during or after download • Mitigation: – All wallet devs sign their installers using known GPG keys • Most devs keep a special offline GPG private key just for this! – Get the developer's GPG public key and verify! If the installer has a valid signature from the correct GPG key, it does not matter where you got it from! There are slides at the end that explain in detail This is very easy in Linux & Mac, but a lot of work in Windows! © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 32. GPG-Verify Your Installers • Secure Downloader within Armory – Latest Armory includes a “Secure Downloader” – It has an Armory Tech. public key hardcoded – Checks signatures, won't let you install if invalid! If the installer has a valid signature from the correct GPG key, it does not matter where you got it from! There are slides at the end that explain in detail This is very easy in Linux & Mac, but a lot of work in Windows! © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014 • Still should check the first installation! – The first installation is still sensitive – If first installation is good, subsequent upgrades are too
  • 33. Backup Your Wallets • Risks: – The most common reason users lose coins is due to not having an unencrypted backup! • You lose all your Bitcoins if your hard drive fails • You lose all your Bitcoins if you forget your password • Your family cannot inherit your money if you get hit by a bus For most users, digital security is most important For most users, physical security is not a concern THEREFORE: Make an unencrypted backup secure it! (paper, DVD or USB key) – It is critical your backup be unencrypted! • An encrypted backup is useless if you forget the password • An encrypted backup is useless if your family would like to inherit your fortune © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 34. Backups: Digital vs. Paper • How much are you willing to bet that your CD or USB key will still work in 5-10 years from now? – If it's more than your wallet value, don't use it • If you use digital backups, make multiple copies – Store together, at least one will work • Paper fades over time, but the data will be recoverable in 100+ years Armory Technologies recommends that you use paper backups whenever possible Copy the data by hand if necessary Most things that destroy paper also destroy digital Armory Paper Backup © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 35. Backup Frequency • IMPORTANT: At the time of this writing (Apr 2014): – Bitcoin-Qt wallets must be backed up every 100 transactions – Multibit and Bitcoin Wallet for Android require regular backups unless you always reuse addresses (not good practice!) • Address reuse is bad, but probably better than losing money – Armory and Electrum wallets only require one backup, ever • Infinite private keys generated from a single private seed • Your paper backup contains the seed in 1-2 lines of letters If you use Armory or Electrum, make a paper backup, one time, then never worry again! In the next few months, all wallet developers will be implementing the one-time-only backup features © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 36. Wallet Passwords • IMPORTANT: Your wallet password is your encryption key for your wallet! • If you forget your password, your wallet will be permanently encrypted and your coins will be lost! ...unless you have an unencrypted backup • No really: I'm serious your coins will be lost forever – Users are not used to the idea of truly, irrecoverable data – Make an unencrypted backup! If you've ever forgotten a password, make an unencrypted backup! © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 37. Wallet Passwords • IMPORTANT: Did you know that all your website passwords saved in your browser are really saved, unprotected on your hard drive? Yes, your passwords are right here! This is true of all browsers! Preferences → Security → “Saved Passwords...” © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 38. Wallet Passwords • Try it for yourself! – Preferences or Settings Security Saved Passwords→ → – Kind of weird staring at your passwords in plaintext, huh? • Malware has it easy for most users: – Read password databases for all web browsers – Try all passwords on each encrypted wallet found – Send all Bitcoins to the attacker's wallet Do not use a wallet password that is the same or similar to any of your website passwords! • Anyone with physical or remote access can do this, too! © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 39. Password Length • Your password is your encryption key: use a good one! – If your wallet is valuable enough, a botnet of 1,000,000 computers may be used to try to brute-force the password • Brute-forcing is exponentially harder with more letters – A password that is easy to remember, is easy to brute force! – Make one that's hard to remember, make unencrypted backup! • Consider using words for your password! – Tend to be easier to remember, have lots of entropy – But still make them random! Use at least 14 random letters or 6 random words Then make an unencrypted backup! © Armory Technologies, Inc. 2013-2014
  • 40. Do Not Reuse Addresses • Risks: – Bitcoin is actually not very good at anonymity – When you reuse addresses you make it far worse – Reusing addresses can hurt other users' privacy as well • Mitigation: – Bitcoin-Qt, Armory and Electrum do not reuse addresses by default – Some users force reuse due to lack of understanding or simplicity of backups – This is doing more harm than good in Armory & Electrum – Multibit & Android Bitcoin Wallet reuse addresses by default – Usually have an option to explicitly create new addresses, but not default If you are using Bitcoin-Qt, Multibit or Android Bitcoin Wallet, you may want to reuse addresses anyway if you do not create backups regularly. (lack of privacy is usually preferred to losing coins)
  • 41. Address Reuse & Privacy • Discussion: – Address reuse is mostly a privacy issue, not a security issue – Reusing the same public-private keypair is expected & safe throughout the rest of internet security – But it is egregiously bad for privacy in Bitcoin Users do not realize just how much privacy information is leaked by interacting with heavily-reused addresses! • There are contexts in which it is okay, but not standard – Donation addresses: all users donating know it is heavily reused, and accept being linked to it
  • 42. Address Reuse & Privacy • If you are using Armory or Electrum, you have no excuse for reusing addresses! – Both automatically generate new addresses for all operations – you have to go out of your way to reuse – Both produce backups that work forever • No matter how many new addresses you use, a backup made when the wallet was created will always work!
  • 43. What are Confirmations? • Bitcoin transactions are not instantaneous • Each confirmation is increased consensus that the transaction actually happened – The first confirmation is the most important – Six confirmations is generally considered irreversible – For $1,000,000+, wait 20-30 confirmations • Confirmations come on average every 10 minutes – Actually exponential random: usually 30 sec to 45 min
  • 44. Confirmation Risks • Do not trust zero-confirmation transactions unless there is pre-existing trust! – Or, you're willing to eat the loss when reversed • Attacks on zero-confirmation tx are easy and cheap – Just not that many people doing it right now • Attacks on one- confirmation tx require a bit more resources • But they are possible!
  • 45. Call-to-Verify Addresses • If you are sending large amounts of Bitcoin: – You want to make sure you send it to the right place! – An attacker could replace the correct address with his own on its way to your wallet software • This is a serious security issue! – The “payment protocol” hopes to solve this by using SSL concepts to prevent address tampering – This will not work in all environments (not everyone has an SSL certificate) • Pick up the phone and call the other parties – Make sure they are who you think they are! – Manually verify the address before execution – This is much more reliable with an offline computer
  • 46. Cold Storage and the Holy Grail
  • 47. Hot vs. Cold “Hot” Wallet – The private keys are on an internet-attached system – All wallets are “hot” by default “Cold” wallet (“offline wallet”) – Gold standard of security – Private keys created and never leave the offline computer – Transactions are signed offline
  • 48. Hot vs. Cold Security • All known, major Bitcoin breaches to date: – Coins stored on a hot wallet – Or unencrypted backups stored on an “hot” computer • Compromising a cold wallet requires one of the following: – Physical access – Extremely advanced USB viruses – User accidentally installing malicious software
  • 49. Setting up the Offline Computer • (1) Install Armory• (1) Install Armory • (2) Create new wallet • (3) Create paper backup – Copy by hand, if necessary • (4) Create “watching- only” copy of wallet Online computer Offline computer • (5) Copy to USB drive • (6) Import “watching- only” wallet Your “watching-only” wallet has only public keys, no private keys!
  • 50. Doing an Offline Transaction • (1) Create transaction – Same as you would with a hot wallet • (3) Load tx from USB Online computer Offline computer • (5) Sign the transaction, save to USB • (6) Load signed transaction, broadcast to network • (2) Save unsigned transaction to USB • (4) Review for accuracy! – All benefit is lost if you don't review on the clean, offline computer
  • 51. Splitting roles • The watching-only wallet is identical to a regular wallet, but cannot sign/spend • An attacker getting the online wallet is a breach of privacy, not security Online computer Offline computer • Offline computer cannot display balances • Remember, the offline wallet is the signing authority. • The offline computer is a pen with specially- identifiable ink, for writing and signing checks – The pen doesn't know or care what it's signing – it's up to you to verify what you're signing
  • 52. Doing it Right • If you are running any kind of online Bitcoin business, offline-wallets are an invaluable tool – Keep bulk of your funds in an offline computer • You can even keep it in a safe-deposit box! – All webservers and on-site computers should only use watching-only wallets! • Securely collect payments to the offline wallet • Track your wallet balance • Track and verify all payments/transactions • No one who gains access to the server can steal it! – Includes employees If you need a hot wallet, keep it small, periodically refill from the cold wallet
  • 53. Use Linux • Once you go down the “cold storage” path you are implementing serious security • As of this writing, the best way to move data between online & offline computer is USB drives – Linux has a much better history of resisting USB- based attacks – We are working on better methods for secure transfer • Armory website has Ubuntu “Offline Bundles” – Will install and run on the first boot of a fresh install of Ubuntu 10.04 or 12.04 – The offline computer needs no other software at all!
  • 54. Extra Credit • Dedicate a small USB key for offline transactions – Minimize exposure to potential viruses • Dedicate a computer for the creating transactions – Minimize exposure to potential viruses – Make it exclusive for Bitcoin processing • Use full-disk encryption to protect privacy – Without it, someone not authorized can still see the wallet value and transaction history – Also adds an extra layer of security Did I mention, make unencrypted backups?
  • 55. Multi-Signature Transactions
  • 56. Multi-Signature Transactions • Most coins have a simple unlock condition: – Here's a public key, sign with its private key to move • Much more complex conditions are possible: – Here's 3 public keys, sign with any 2 private keys – This is a 2-of-3 multi-signature transaction
  • 57. A Critical Puzzle Piece • Multi-signature transactions are critical for large organizations – Wallets are managed by employees, who may steal – All wallets currently have a single point of failure • You can have: – Five board members of a company create wallets – All money handled by the company goes into 3-of-5 – All transactions requires 3 signatures to be moved • The Bitcoin network supports any M-of-N up to 20-of-20 !
  • 58. Armory “Lockboxes” • Armory just unveiled a multi-sig interface – Collect public keys to create lockboxes – Deposit money in lockboxes like any other address – To spend from a lockbox: • Create a transaction • Each other party signs it • Last party broadcasts it (finalizes it) • Multi-sig transactions are inherently complex! – Armory has made them about as easy as possible... – ...just like it did with cold storage!
  • 59. Collect Public Keys
  • 60. Review and Multi-sign
  • 61. Armory “Lockboxes” • The lockbox interface is the first step towards a more user-friendly version – Decentralized: no third-party services – All data can be exchanged via email, chat, USB • Armory (and others) will create server-assisted version that handles most complexity for you – Create a spending transaction from a 2-of-2 – Other party or device gets notification, confirms
  • 62. The Future Coming Soon!
  • 63. Hardware Wallets • The Trezor is the most anticipated HW wallet • Should be released in January, 2014 • A great tradeoff for security and convenience • Hardware wallets hold the private keys and sign on the device – The private keys cannot be read from it – It will only emit the public keys Trezor Hardware Wallet
  • 64. Hardware Wallets • The wallets they use are standardized – Should be supported by all major wallet apps • Will be a huge win for convenience & security • Hardware wallets are an 80% solution – They lack flexibility – Another layer of trust required – More difficult to audit – Connect directly to online computer via USB
  • 65. Armory Technologies, Inc. 8160 Maple Lawn Blvd, Ste 200 Fulton, MD 20759 Follow us on Twitter @armory
  • 66. Extras Stuff that I wanted to present but couldn't fit
  • 67. Verify Your Installers • GPG is a powerful, thoroughly-trusted crypto tool – Presintalled in Linux & Mac; takes effort in Windows – Because it's hard in Windows, I verify my Windows installers in Linux • (2) Import the GPG keys to your keyring (only done once) – Most tools have search & import function (Linux & Mac: “gpg --recv-keys <keyID>” – Each developer's “keyID” should be well-known: mine is 98832223 *If it is a .deb installer (Linux), it may be signed directly, only need “dpkg-sig –verify *.deb” • (3) Download the installers and signed hash files* – Hash the installer file (Linux & Mac: “sha256sum <filename>” ) – The result looks something like this: f98c7a798122167c98c0a798122167f9030a7 – Compare to the hashes in the signed file • (1) Get GPG and file-hashing tool – Linux & Mac: Do nothing, it's all pre-installed! – Windows: Download gpg4win and SHA256 file hash tool (HashCalc is good) • (4) Verify the signature on the hashes file – Win: use right-click gpg4win menu; Linux & Mac: “gpg -v sha256hashes.txt.asc” – MAKE SURE THE FINGERPRINT MATCHES THE EXPECTED KEY – Anyone can create a “valid” signature – but not from the developer's key! Steps
  • 68. GPG Keys of Major Wallets • The most sensitive part of using GPG keys is the fingerprint distribution • So here they are! (most GPG apps only show last 8 chars)
  • 69. Multi-Sig vs. Fragmenting M-of-N Backups M-of-N Multi-Sig
  • 70. Multi-Sig vs. Fragmenting M-of-N Backups M-of-N Multi-Sig Fragmented backups are for securing your backup All transactions still require a single signature, from a single computer The fragments only need to be collected if wallet is lost Multi-signature transactions are network-enforced Multiple public keys are included in the unlock conditions of the coins Network expects multiple sigs for every transaction
  • 71. Brainwallets (don't use them!) • Humans are really bad at memorizing things • You will lose coins • Your family will never recover your coins if you die – You literally take your wealth with you to your grave • Any system that requires your brain to be useful is essentially a brainwallet • This is why Armory hates encrypted backups: – If all your wallets are encrypted – And all your backups are encrypted – You have a brainwallet!
  • 72. Segregate Funds by Security • Risks: – Having all your funds in a single wallet, means all funds have the same security – Usually means funds are super-secure-but-inconvenient, or not properly secured • Mitigation: – Use multiple wallets (Armory & Multibit have native support) – Exercise all the best practices on the majority of your funds – Keeps most of your funds secured, periodically refill low- security wallets
  • 73. Sweep vs. Import • Definitions: – “Sweeping” an address/key means sending all the coins owned by that key to a new address (one you control) – “Importing” an address means to add the private key to your wallet – usually so it can be reused • When to sweep vs import – Sweep if anyone else has ever had access to the private key – Importing really only makes sense with address reuse • I already told you not to do that! When in doubt, SWEEP • Serious Security to consider – You import a key that someone else has – That person pays you for services/goods – They sweep the key after you have delivered