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@shl0ms
lil Claude experiment: BIPHex, an artistic cryptographic implementation replacing the 2048 word BIP39 dictionary with all 256³ possible hex colors - allowing for 288 bits of entropy instead of 128 bits you can generate or access a seed using either a 12 hex string or a 4x3 SVG this differs from bip39colors since that tool just starts with a standard BIP39 mnemonic and maps each of the 2048 words to a color - this experiment uses all of the 16,777,216 colors and hashes them directly as a replacement for a wordlist you can also use this method to deterministically create a wallet from any image using BIPHex, eg Minion Jesus = 0xb67e1abd34462a190cd15e97be3a0c6cd1062b11
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kazakhstanpauly0x
@kazakhstanipauli
Way ahead of where my smooth brain was lol For someone smarter than me. Original pAI contract and max wallet as the inputs 1.Common Factor: 2.Ratio: The numbers have a ratio of 3:2, indicating proportionality. Breaking Down the Numbers We can use these mathematical properties to generate a seed for an Ethereum wallet key or create a unique encoding mechanism. Step-by-Step Breakdown Prime Factorization 2.Mathematical Relationship: 3.Common Factor Usage: •The common factor, is a central element in both numbers, acting as a bridge in their ratio. Using Numbers for Ethereum Wallet Key Generation Here’s how you can use these numbers creatively to generate an Ethereum wallet key or seed:
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kazakhstanpauly0x pfp
kazakhstanpauly0x
@kazakhstanipauli
Method 1: Encoding as Hexadecimal Seed 1.Convert Numbers to Hexadecimal: 2.Combine into a Seed Phrase: •Create a seed by combining the hexadecimal representations: 3.Derive Private Key: •Use cryptographic libraries to generate a private key from the seed Someone could utilize a dataset of 32-byte numbers that are prime. Or someone could develop an ASIC to generate 32-byte numbers. Once an attacker has a list of prime numbers, they can test each one against the calculated address derived from the prime number to see if there are any unspent outputs.
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