Steem Key Management
To keep your Steem account secure you must save your master password and keep it somewhere safe. The master password is used to derive all keys for your account, including the owner key. If logging in with your post key, make sure you don't overwrite or misplace your original master password.
The Steemit FAQ explains why the password is long and random for maximum account security. There is no way to recover your account if you lose your password or owner key! Because your account has real value, it is very important that you save your master password somewhere safe where you will not lose it.[1]
It is also a strongly recommended that you store an offline copy of your password somewhere safe in case of a hard drive failure or other calamity. Consider digital offline storage, such as an external disk or flash drive, as well as printed paper. Use a safe deposit box for best redundancy. Fabian Schuh (@xeroc)'s post on a Steem Paperwallet Generator is an excellent resource.[2]
In June 7th 2017 Krzysztof Szumny (@noisy) found a flaw in design that made his cousin accidentally pasted his own password into wrong field (a memo field), when he made a transfer. He wrote a script and warned all steemians caught in the same mistake.[3]
Contents
Managing Keys
If you don't manage your keys correctly, you are putting your account at risk.
If you get hacked you are giving them access to every key you own on Steemit. Loss of your keys will result in loss of access to your account. Keys should be stored privately and safely.
Types of Keys
- Posting Key
- Active Key
- Memo Key
- Owner Key
- Master password
Posting Key
The posting key is used exclusively for submitting posts, applying upvotes and downvotes, selecting and deselecting followers, muting accounts and claiming reward balances.
The posting key is the safest way to log into an account. It limits the privilege of the person using it to functions that do not have access to the wallet, thereby maintaining the safety and security of the tokens.
The posting key offers the safest way to access your account on a regular basis and it is recommended that you develop the habit of using it as your primary way of logging into your account.
Active Key
The active key should ONLY need to be used to confirm transaction or trades or change user settings.
Do not use your active key to log in for posting and upvoting on a daily basis. Use your posting key instead.
Memo Key
The Memo Key is used for handling private messages and encrypted transaction memos.
The memo key is the only key that can encrypt and decrypt private messages sent and received via your account.
Owner Key
The owner key is the key with the highest privilege level. It is the key required to change all the other keys. This is the key that should be most carefully safeguarded against loss or theft. With this key your account can be completely taken over by a malicious party. Loss of this key severely limits the operation of the account. The owner key is not directly visible on the steemit.com website but can be derived from the master password using the CLI Wallet or an API Library like steem-python.
Master Password
The master password is used to derive all keys above. A hashing function calculates the corresponding private and public keys from the master password, the account name and the key type ("posting", "active", "owner" or "memo"). Having the master password enables to retrieve all private keys of an account. See CLI Wallet's get_private_key_from_password
or steem-python's steembase.account.PasswordKey()
on how to derive the keys.
Don't use the master password to log into steemit.com or any other steem application. Never copy the master password into posts or transaction memos. Use the lower privilege keys to maintain the security of your account.
Please expand upon this subsection.
Locating Steem Keys
Your Steem keys are found in your wallet under the permissions tab. At https://steemit.com/@yourusername/permissions. Substitute your actual username for yourusername in the example shown.
The page will look something like this image:
Securing Your Account
- Secure your master password generated on your first signing up somewhere no one will find it. You should not need you master password afterwards unless you want to change it.
- Show your private posting key by clicking the button and copy to a safe place.
- Show your private active key by clicking the button then copy to a safe place.
- You can copy the memo private if you need to but you likely won't need it.
- Now copy your private posting key and use that as your password to login.
Once logging in with the posting key and going back to the permission page it should look like this:
References
- ↑ How can I keep my account secure, Steemit FAQ, retrieved in 17/7/2017
- ↑ (Paperwallet) Easily secure your account with Steem Paperwallet Generator, Written by Fabian Schuh (@xeroc) in August 2016.
- ↑ We just hacked 11 accounts on Steemit! ~$21 749 in STEEM and SBD is under our control. But we are good guys So..., Written by Krzysztof Szumny (@noisy) in June 7th, 2017
Links
- Steem.io : https://steem.io
- Steem Dynamic Accounts Permissions : https://steem.io/documentation/dynamic-account-permissions/
- @pfunk : A User's Guide to the Different Steem Keys or Passwords June 2016
- @steemitguide : Everything you need to know about Steemit's Permission Keys; Posting, Owner, Active, Memo! Digital Passwords with Unique Functionality, that allows you to Securely connect your Steemit Account with Third-party Services January 2017
- @ramblin-bob : How I nearly lost my Steemit account (and all my STEEM) - A WARNING February 2017
- @smi : IMPORTANT !!! Vulnerability in password protection for accounts February 2017
- @sassal : How To: Keeping Your Cryptocurrency Safe April 2017
- @good-karma : Steem private keys analogy May 25th, 2017
- @good-karma : Steem multi-authority permissions and how Posting authority works May 29th, 2017
- @anarchyhasnogods : Keeping Your Steemit Account Password Secure June 13th, 2017
- @noisy : Public and Private Keys. How they are used by Steem., June 15th, 2017
- @paolobeneforti : Phishing alert! Don't give your private key to anyone June 15th, 2017
- @thecryptofiend : A Quick Guide To How Keys and Passwords Work on Steem and Steemit June 16th, 2017
- @evimeria : I have back my stolen account on Steemit!!! Happy August to all!!! August 1st, 2017
- @neoxian : Warning! Do not log on (anywhere) using your owner key September 21st, 2017
- @kingswisdom : How I easily discovered more than $160,000 worth of private keys in one day on Steemit October 11th, 2017
- @firepower : 4 Tips For Steemit Account Recovery & Wallet Security! December 7th, 2017
- @alignment : I recovered my account after it had been stolen but I can’t edit the phisher’s comments. advice is needed. March 9th, 2018
Related articles
External links
- Quartz : Watch this extorted money get lost in the expanse of the blockchain Written by Keith Collins, published in 7/17/2017
- WeTrust Blog : Why Do I Need a Public and Private Key on the Blockchain? Written by Leon Di, published in 1/29/2017
- BTC News : Steemit Investigates Security Breach and Theft of $85000 in Steem Written by Gautham N, published in 7/15/2016
- Softpedia : Steemit Social Network Hacked, User Funds Stolen, DDoS Attack Ensued Written by Catalin Cimpanu, published in 7/18/2016
In other languages
- Bahasa Indonesia (Indonesian) : Manajemen Kunci Steem
- 日本語 (Japanese) : Steemキーの管理
- 繁體中文 (Traditional Chinese) : 管理Steem鑰匙
Help keep this wiki page updated. Register, click in edit, add or modify the text and save. If you're already a steemian you can be rewarded with steem, see how in @steemcenterwiki. |