An attempt to solve the phemex puzzle for a prize of 2.1 BTC
- Address is 1h8BNZkhsPiu6EKazP19WkGxDw3jHf9aT
- The compressed public key is
02b4a72e4aaa69ba04b80c6891df01f50d191a65eccc61e4e9862d1e421ce815b3
- 21 digit prime is
957496696762772407663
- Some words from the image need to be converted into a 27-digit decimal number
- Puzzle is solvable without hints
- Capitalization of words in puzzle matters
- 27-digit number is not necessarily a prime
- 27-digit number doesn't involve consecutive digits of
e
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Puzzle announcement article - January 16, 2020
- 2.1 BTC are hidden in this picture, can you find the solution?
- Once a participant has found the correct private key in the image, they will be able to transfer 1.1 BTC to the public key address of their own wallet. A further 1 BTC will be deposited to their Phemex account once they prove they control the private key.
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A letter from Max (27 digit clue) - January 23, 2020
- The first 21-digit prime found in consecutive digits of e is:
957496696762772407663
- The private key you derive from Satoshi’s portrait is a big integer, not Wallet Import Format (WIF)
- The filename of the picture is irrelevant 😒
- The next step involves converting some words from the portrait, without I/O, into a 27-digit number
- Go back to step 4) again if you can’t figure it out
- The first 21-digit prime found in consecutive digits of e is:
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The Last Hint of Phemex 2.1BTC Puzzle - February 21, 2020
- After meeting the Phemex team, the Goddess Pheme repeated the words “little is big”, twice within three days.
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The "solution" - March 21, 2020
- The first 21-digit prime found in consecutive digits of e is:
957496696762772407663
- 27-digit number:
237871847045914904726285415
(first hint came out on Jan. 23, two times within three days)b58decode('SatoshiNakamoto')
- Convert the bytes to integer using little endian, which is bigger than that of big endianCharset (BTC): '123456789ABCDEFGHJKLMNPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijkmnopqrstuvwxyz'
- I do find some people try to convert ‘SatoshiNakamoto’ in telegram chat, so don’t blame me that they are not ‘some words from the portrait’
- Last number:
554405551875
b58decode(‘Phemex’)
- Convert the bytes to integer using little endian, which is also bigger than that of big endianCharset (XRP): 'rpshnaf39wBUDNEGHJKLM4PQRST7VWXYZ2bcdeCg65jkm8oFqi1tuvAxyz'
- The first 21-digit prime found in consecutive digits of e is: