Video - How to Store Your Bitcoin, Ethereum, Dash, ETC

In this video, you will know how to keep your cryptocurrencies safe. It explains how to preserve your private keys and chose the nice wallet you want.

TRANSCRIPT

If you plan on trading coins regularly, it makes more sense for you to store the coins you want to trade frequently on the online exchange that supports that coin. Exchanges are the easiest way to store your cryptos, but it is by far the least secure. In order to help counteract this vulnerability, the very least you can do is use a very secure password along with two factor authentification.

I suggest using a password generator that includes upper and lowercase letters and numbers that is 16 characters long. You can download the free Google authenticator app and link this to any exchange you use.

If you are looking to store your crypto for the long term, and you don’t have an interest in trading or transferring them, then I’d suggest looking into what is called “cold storage” wallets. These come in the form of paper wallets and hardware wallets.

Cold storage refers to the fact that your coins will be taken offline.

These cold storage wallets will give you peace of mind knowing that there is no way for a hacker to access your coins- that is until you decide to bring them back online to either sell or to transfer to a different location.

Cold storage is very secure, however they are not the most convenient.

Paper wallets can be produced using bit address.org for bitcoin, or you can use walletgenerator.net for other crypto coins.

Or you can purchase hardware wallets which are relatively easy to setup and are more convenient for making transactions with your coins than a paper wallet.

I’ll include links in the description of this video so you can explore hardware wallets like the tremor, ledger nano S, and the keepKey.

Here is a link to a couple of my past videos that spotlight these hardware wallets.

There are a couple of things you need to remember when setting up and using a cold storage option.

If you are using a paper wallet, upon setup, remember to disable your wifi or internet connection when the address is being produced. Also, never keep any coins in a wallet that you have exposed the private key.

If you want to withdraw any crypto out of your paper wallet, I highly suggest that you take everything out of the wallet and if you have any remaining coins you wish to keep in cold storage, make a new paper wallet for them.

You can always download the official wallet of the coin onto your computer, for example, you can download the bitcoin core wallet, or the ethereum wallet, the ripple wallet, the dash wallet, the zcash wallet, and on and on, the list continues for all other crypto coins as well.

These official wallets are all different with different pros and cons and capabilities. These wallets are far more secure than holding your coins on an exchange, these wallets also make tranferring these coins easier than using cold storage.

One major benefit for using official wallets, particularly the ethereum wallet, is the fact that many ICO’s utilize ethereum and in fact require you to invest ether by only using an official ethereum or mist wallet.

You can and absolutely should backup these wallets by saving your .dat file on a USB drive in case your computer is lost or damaged.

But, these wallets do take up space on your computer, and they might be confusing and are almost always time consuming to set up, however I highly reccomend using these wallets if you don’t want to worry about the lack of security on exchanges, or the hassle of transferring them in and out of cold storage.

Written by Melvin Draupnir on April 27, 2017.