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<br><br><br>img width: 750px; iframe.movie width: 750px; height: 450px; <br>Secure [https://web3-extension.com/ Leather Wallet download extension] wallet recovery phrase setup guide<br><br><br><br>Secure Your Crypto A Step-by-Step Leather Wallet Recovery Phrase Setup<br><br>Immediately after generating your twelve or twenty-four mnemonic seed, write each word with a permanent, fine-tipped pen on acid-free paper. Ballpoint ink can smudge or fade; a pigment-based archival pen provides lasting resistance to light and moisture. Store this paper separately from the physical item holding your public keys.<br><br><br>Never digitize this sequence of words. Avoid typing it into a computer, saving it as a file, or capturing it with a photograph. The primary threat vector for loss is online exposure to malware or inadvertent cloud synchronization. Your handwritten copy exists in a single, offline state.<br><br><br>For durability, consider stamping the words into thin sheets of corrosion-resistant metal using a specialized tool. This protects against damage from fire, water, or physical degradation over decades. Keep the metal plates in distinct, secure locations, such as a personal safe and a safety deposit box, to mitigate localized risk.<br><br><br>Verify the accuracy of your recorded words by performing a dry-run restoration before transferring any value. Use the backup to initialize a temporary, isolated instance of your signing software to confirm it regenerates the correct public addresses. Destroy this test environment completely afterward.<br><br>Q&A:<br>Is it really necessary to write down my recovery phrase on paper? Can't I just save it as a file on my computer?<br><br>Storing your recovery phrase as a digital file (like a text document, screenshot, or photo) is a serious security risk. Computers and phones are frequently connected to the internet, making them vulnerable to malware, hacking, and unauthorized cloud backups. A keylogger could record you typing it, or ransomware could encrypt your files. Paper, while having its own risks like physical damage, is not susceptible to these remote, automated attacks. The core security principle is "air-gapping" — keeping the phrase completely offline. Paper provides this gap. For added durability, consider engraving the phrase on a metal plate designed for this purpose, as it resists fire and water.<br><br>I've heard about "passphrases" as an extra word. What is that and should I use one?<br><br>A passphrase (sometimes called a "25th word") is an optional feature offered by some wallets. It's not part of your standard 12 or 24-word recovery phrase. You create it yourself, and it acts as a custom addition to your seed. Think of it this way: your standard recovery phrase opens the main vault. Adding a passphrase creates a completely new, hidden vault behind a secret door only you know. It provides a strong layer of defense if your physical backup is ever compromised, as a thief would also need this extra word. However, it's critical: if you forget or mis-type your passphrase, you will lose access to those funds permanently. The wallet software will not and cannot help you recover it. Only use this if you are confident you can manage another piece of critical information.<br><br>How many copies of my recovery phrase should I make, and where should I keep them?<br><br>Creating two or three copies is a common balance between security and redundancy. Relying on a single piece of paper is risky due to loss or destruction. Store each copy in a separate, secure physical location. For example, one in a home safe or lockbox, and another in a safety deposit box or with a trusted family member in a different city (only if you fully trust them). Never store two copies in the same house if it's prone to fire or flood. The goal is to ensure that a disaster at one location doesn't wipe out your only backup. Always keep the copies hidden and never reveal the location or the phrase itself to anyone.<br><br>What's the safest way to actually write down the words during the initial setup?<br><br>Perform the setup in a private room, away from webcams, phone cameras, and other people. Close unnecessary applications on your computer. Have your backup medium (paper, metal plate) ready before the wallet generates the phrase. Write each word clearly and in the correct order, double-checking your handwriting. Do not type it anywhere else during this process. After writing, verify what you've written against the words on the device's screen—do this carefully, word by word, at least twice. Only after you have confirmed a perfect match should you proceed to the next step in the wallet setup, which usually involves verifying random words from the list.<br><br>My wallet is asking me to verify the phrase by selecting words. I'm nervous about getting it wrong. What happens if I make a mistake?<br><br>This verification step is your final safety check before the wallet is activated. If you select the wrong words, the wallet software will tell you the verification failed. This is a good thing—it means the process is working and caught an error. You will then be given the opportunity to start the entire backup process over from the beginning. This generates a brand new, random recovery phrase. You must then destroy the previous, incorrectly copied phrase permanently and write down the new one. There is no penalty for restarting; it is a built-in feature to ensure accuracy. Taking your time here is far better than rushing and having an incorrect backup that looks right but fails when you truly need it.<br>
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