What nonsense are you blabbering about, you little newbie? 😂
山顶冻人—巨石学院
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This is a blatant trap for fishing. Without a password, it can't be opened, and now you are starting to feel anxious, right?
First, let's lay down the iron rule of cryptocurrency: the private key is ownership; this is a mathematical issue, not a matter of any institution's attitude. The USDT you hold is essentially a digital asset on the blockchain, and the only proof that you are the owner is the corresponding private key —
Without the private key, even if you are the 'original owner,' you cannot complete any rights confirmation on the chain; without the private key, the 1,900,000 USDT held by the police is just a string of locked waste code, unable to be transferred, let alone talk about 'confiscation'?
Now let's look at the absurdity of this notice: saying 'if someone claims it, it will be confiscated' — the premise of claiming is to present the private key, right? If someone can present the private key, they can directly transfer the assets away; how could it be your 'confiscation'? Saying 'if no one claims it, it will still be confiscated' — you don't even have the private key, how can you move this pile of numbers into the 'national treasury'? The transfer of assets on the chain is determined by mathematical signatures, not by a police notice.
To put it bluntly, this 'claiming drama' is either because the police completely do not understand the underlying rules of cryptocurrency — treating on-chain assets like paper currency, thinking they can claim it with an ID; or they are fully aware that this pile of assets without a private key cannot be taken away, intentionally creating a 'fishing' gimmick. But in the world of cryptocurrency, the rules are a dead mathematical logic: without a private key, you can neither 'claim' nor 'confiscate'; this 1,900,000 USDT has always been a 'dead asset' on the chain $USDT
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