tldr; Joe Grand, a YouTuber known for hacking hardware crypto wallets, has recovered $2.24 million from a KeepKey wallet and claims to have cracked a $60 million Trezor wallet. His latest video demonstrates a repeatable exploit workflow for older hardware wallets, involving physical attacks, chip extraction, and brute-forcing PINs. While the $60 million wallet’s recovery is teased for a future video, the demonstration raises concerns about the security of older wallet models, particularly those using the STM32F2 microcontroller family.
*This summary is auto generated by a bot and not meant to replace reading the original article. As always, DYOR.
ReallyOrdinaryMan on
He is recovering old deprecated devices, by attacking them with „physical fault injection“. Attacking wallet devices with this method discovered in 2020, and no longer works in new devices.
zmooner on
And he uses a visual of a Trezor Safe 3 to scare people?
guajojo on
This whole thing is clicbait
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tldr; Joe Grand, a YouTuber known for hacking hardware crypto wallets, has recovered $2.24 million from a KeepKey wallet and claims to have cracked a $60 million Trezor wallet. His latest video demonstrates a repeatable exploit workflow for older hardware wallets, involving physical attacks, chip extraction, and brute-forcing PINs. While the $60 million wallet’s recovery is teased for a future video, the demonstration raises concerns about the security of older wallet models, particularly those using the STM32F2 microcontroller family.
*This summary is auto generated by a bot and not meant to replace reading the original article. As always, DYOR.
He is recovering old deprecated devices, by attacking them with „physical fault injection“. Attacking wallet devices with this method discovered in 2020, and no longer works in new devices.
And he uses a visual of a Trezor Safe 3 to scare people?
This whole thing is clicbait