2026-03-02 00:36:46 +08:00
2026-03-02 00:36:46 +08:00
2026-02-21 01:20:38 +08:00
2026-02-21 01:20:38 +08:00
2026-02-12 19:08:46 +08:00

SeedPGP v1.4.7

Secure BIP39 mnemonic backup using PGP encryption and QR codes

A client-side web app for encrypting cryptocurrency seed phrases with OpenPGP and encoding them as QR-friendly Base45 frames. Designed for offline use on TailsOS with built-in security verification.

Live Demo (Testing Only): https://seedpgp-web.pages.dev


For real funds ($100+), follow this airgapped TailsOS workflow:

# 1. Boot TailsOS (airgapped - no network!)
# 2. Open Terminal and run:
git clone https://github.com/kccleoc/seedpgp-web.git
cd seedpgp-web

# 3. Build and verify (single command)
make full-build-tails

# 4. Serve locally in Tor Browser
make serve-local
# → Open http://localhost:8000 in Tor Browser

That's it. The Makefile handles everything: build, CSP injection, integrity verification, and security auditing.


💡 Security-First Usage Guide

Your Fund Size Recommended Setup Build Command Time
Testing (<$100) Any computer, local mode make build-offline 5 min
Real Use ($100$10K) Clean computer, network disabled make build-offline 15 min
Serious ($10K$100K) TailsOS or Ubuntu Live (airgapped) make full-build-tails 30 min
Vault (>$100K) TailsOS + hardware wallet + multisig make full-build-tails 1+ hour

The more funds at stake, the more security precautions you take.

Note: TailsOS and Ubuntu Live USB provide equivalent security for offline seed operations. See Path 1 (TailsOS) and Path 3 (Ubuntu Live) below for detailed workflows.


🔧 Makefile Commands Reference

Core Build Commands

# Install dependencies
make install

# Build for Cloudflare Pages (production)
make build

# Build for offline local testing
make build-offline

# Build for TailsOS with embedded CSP + integrity checks
make build-tails

# Full TailsOS pipeline (recommended for real use)
make full-build-tails

Testing & Verification

# Verify TailsOS build integrity (CSP, checksums, paths)
make verify-tails

# Verify offline compatibility
make verify-offline

# Run security audit
make audit

# Run test suite
make test

Local Servers

# Serve with Python HTTP server
make serve-local

# Serve with Bun server
make serve-bun

# Development mode (hot reload)
make dev

Utility

# Clean build artifacts
make clean

# Show all available commands
make help

This is the gold standard for seed phrase management. Takes 30 minutes, provides maximum security.

Why TailsOS?

  • Amnesic: Runs entirely in RAM, leaves no trace on disk
  • Airgapped: You physically disconnect from all networks
  • Isolated: Browser can't access persistent storage
  • Audited: Open-source OS trusted by journalists and activists

Step 1: Prepare TailsOS USB

# On your primary computer:

# 1. Download Tails ISO
# Visit: https://tails.net/install/
# Download latest version (verify signature!)

# 2. Burn to USB stick
# Use Balena Etcher or dd command
# Minimum 8GB USB required

# 3. Label this USB "TAILS SEED OPS"
# Keep separate from daily-use USBs

Step 2: Boot TailsOS (Airgapped)

# Physical security checklist:
□ Unplug Ethernet cable from computer
□ Disable WiFi in BIOS (if possible)
□ Put phone in airplane mode (away from desk)
□ Close curtains (prevent shoulder surfing)

# Boot process:
1. Insert TailsOS USB
2. Reboot computer
3. Press F12/ESC/DEL to enter boot menu
4. Select USB drive
5. Choose "Start Tails"
6. ⚠️ DO NOT configure WiFi when prompted
7. Verify network icon shows "disconnected"

Step 3: Build SeedPGP on TailsOS

# Open Terminal (Applications → System Tools → Terminal)

# Install Bun (first time only)
curl -fsSL https://bun.sh/install | bash
source ~/.bashrc

# Clone repository
git clone https://github.com/kccleoc/seedpgp-web.git
cd seedpgp-web

# Install dependencies
make install

# Build with security hardening
make full-build-tails

Note: All builds include a baseline CSP in index.html, but the make full-build-tails pipeline injects a stricter, WASM-compatible CSP tailored for TailsOS.

What make full-build-tails does:

  1. Cleans all previous build artifacts
  2. Builds with relative paths for offline use
  3. Injects CSP meta tag directly into HTML
  4. Creates dist-tails/ directory with:
    • Complete app bundle
    • README.txt with SHA-256 checksums
    • Security documentation
  5. Verifies CSP enforcement, relative paths, integrity
  6. Audits for network calls, external URLs, security issues

Step 4: Verify Build Integrity

The build process automatically verifies:

✅ CSP enforces connect-src 'none' (all network calls blocked)
✅ Relative paths detected (offline compatible)
✅ No suspicious external domains
  fetch() references exist in bundle (from openpgp.js)
✓  These are BLOCKED by CSP connect-src 'none' at runtime
✅ TailsOS build verification complete

Security Note: fetch() and XMLHttpRequest references exist in the bundle (from OpenPGP.js library code), but they are completely blocked by CSP connect-src 'none' at the browser level. The verification confirms CSP enforcement, not the absence of dead code.

Step 5: Serve Locally in Tor Browser

# Start local HTTP server
make serve-local

# Output:
# 🚀 Starting local server at http://localhost:8000
#    Press Ctrl+C to stop

Open Tor Browser (pre-installed in TailsOS):

  1. Launch Tor Browser from desktop
  2. Navigate to: http://localhost:8000
  3. App loads — all processing happens locally
  4. Verify "Network BLOCKED" indicator in app header

Step 6: Use SeedPGP Securely

Now proceed to "Using SeedPGP" section below. All entropy generation, encryption, and QR generation happens offline in your browser's memory.

When finished:

# Stop server (Ctrl+C in Terminal)
# Shutdown TailsOS (Applications → Shutdown)
# ✅ All data erased from RAM
# ✅ No trace left on computer

🏠 Path 2: Local Offline Setup (Acceptable for <$10K)

For smaller amounts, you can run on a regular computer with network disabled.

# Clone repository
git clone https://github.com/kccleoc/seedpgp-web.git
cd seedpgp-web

# Install dependencies
make install

# Build for offline use
make full-build-offline

# Disconnect network NOW:
# - Unplug Ethernet
# - Disable WiFi
# - Airplane mode ON

# Serve locally
make serve-local

# Open browser: http://localhost:8000

Security vs TailsOS:

Feature Local Offline TailsOS Airgapped
RAM-only execution No Yes
Disk trace ⚠️ Possible None
Extension isolation ⚠️ Manual Automatic
Memory dump protection Limited Strong
Best for Testing, <$10K $10K+, serious use

🐧 Path 3: Ubuntu Live USB (Alternative to TailsOS)

Ubuntu Live USB provides equivalent security to TailsOS for offline seed operations. It's RAM-only, amnesic (data erased on shutdown), and may be more familiar if you're already comfortable with Ubuntu.

When to Use Ubuntu Live USB

  • You're already familiar with Ubuntu/Linux workflows
  • You only need offline operations (no Tor required)
  • You want faster boot time (~1 min vs Tails ~2 min)
  • You might need to install additional tools during the session

Security Properties

Feature Ubuntu Live USB TailsOS
RAM-only execution Yes Yes
Amnesic (data erased on poweroff) Yes Yes
Network isolation ⚠️ Manual disable Automatic (Tor-only)
Pre-installed crypto tools Need Python GPG, KeePassXC built-in
Boot time ~1 min ~2 min
Best for Offline seed ops Offline + Tor workflows

For your use case (offline seed blending): Both are equivalent.


Step 1: Prepare Ubuntu Live USB

On your regular computer:

# Download Ubuntu Desktop LTS ISO
wget https://releases.ubuntu.com/24.04/ubuntu-24.04-desktop-amd64.iso

# Verify SHA256 checksum
sha256sum ubuntu-24.04-desktop-amd64.iso
# Compare against official checksum from ubuntu.com/download

# Create bootable USB (Linux/Mac)
sudo dd if=ubuntu-24.04-desktop-amd64.iso of=/dev/sdX bs=4M status=progress
# ⚠️ Replace /dev/sdX with your USB device (check with 'lsblk')

# Windows: Use Rufus or balenaEtcher instead

Prepare SeedPGP on a separate USB drive:

# Clone and build on your trusted computer
git clone https://github.com/kccleoc/seedpgp-web.git
cd seedpgp-web
make install
make full-build-tails  # Creates dist-tails/ with embedded CSP

# Generate checksum file
cd dist-tails
sha256sum index.html > CHECKSUM.txt
cd ..

# Copy to second USB drive (label it "SEEDPGP-OFFLINE")
cp -r dist-tails/ /media/your-usb/seedpgp-offline/

You now have:

  1. USB #1: Ubuntu Live bootable installer
  2. USB #2: Pre-verified SeedPGP build with checksums

Step 2: Boot Ubuntu Live (Network Disabled)

Physical security checklist:

□ Unplug Ethernet cable from computer
□ Remove SIM card (if using a laptop with cellular)
□ Put phone in airplane mode (away from desk)
□ Close curtains (prevent shoulder surfing)

Boot process:

  1. Insert Ubuntu Live USB (#1)
  2. Reboot computer and press F12/F2/ESC during startup
  3. Select USB drive from boot menu
  4. Choose "Try Ubuntu" (NOT "Install Ubuntu")
  5. IMMEDIATELY after desktop loads: Click network icon → Disable Wi-Fi
  6. Verify network status in terminal:
ip link show
# All interfaces should show 'state DOWN' except 'lo' (loopback)

# Confirm no external routes
ip route
# Should ONLY show: 127.0.0.0/8 dev lo

Step 3: Verify Clean State

# Open Terminal (Ctrl+Alt+T)

# Check no mounted writable drives
mount | grep -v "ro,"
# Should only show read-only mounts (iso9660, squashfs)

# Check no swap space
swapon --show
# Should return nothing

# Verify RAM usage
free -h
# Should show ~2-4GB used (OS running entirely in RAM)

Step 4: Load and Verify SeedPGP

# Insert USB #2 (SEEDPGP-OFFLINE)
# It will auto-mount to /media/ubuntu/SEEDPGP-OFFLINE or similar

# Navigate to the build folder
cd /media/ubuntu/*/seedpgp-offline/
# Or use: cd /media/ubuntu/SEEDPGP-OFFLINE/seedpgp-offline/

# Verify integrity before running
sha256sum -c CHECKSUM.txt
# Should output: index.html: OK

# If verification fails → STOP! Do not proceed.
# Re-build on your trusted computer and copy again.

Step 5: Serve Locally with Python

Important: You cannot open file:// URLs directly in modern browsers due to CORS restrictions. You must serve over HTTP on localhost.

# Start Python HTTP server (Python 3 is pre-installed)
python3 -m http.server 8000 &
# The '&' runs it in background

# You'll see:
# Serving HTTP on 0.0.0.0 port 8000 (http://0.0.0.0:8000/) ...

Security verification: Localhost is safe

Even though the server listens on 0.0.0.0:8000 (all interfaces), there are no active network interfaces to reach it from outside:

# Verify localhost-only access
sudo ss -tlnp | grep 8000
# Shows: LISTEN 0.0.0.0:8000 (looks exposed, but...)

# Check which interfaces exist
ip addr show
# Should ONLY show 'lo' (loopback 127.0.0.1) with status UP
# No eth0, wlan0, or other interfaces should be UP

# Try accessing from "outside" (this should fail)
curl http://192.168.1.100:8000  # Use any typical LAN IP
# Should instantly fail: "Network unreachable"

The key: Even though Python binds to 0.0.0.0, there are no physical network paths to reach it. Localhost is a kernel-internal loopback interface.


Step 6: Open in Firefox

# Launch Firefox with localhost URL
firefox http://localhost:8000 &

Verify the app loaded correctly:

  1. SeedPGP interface appears
  2. Check browser console (F12) for CSP enforcement:
    • Should see no CSP violation errors
    • Network tab should show only localhost requests
  3. Verify "Network BLOCKED" indicator in app header

Step 7: Use SeedPGP

Now proceed with your seed operations (see "Using SeedPGP: The Workflow" section below):

  • Generate entropy (dice rolls recommended)
  • Blend multiple hardware wallet seeds (if applicable)
  • Encrypt to PGP key or password
  • Export QR backup
  • Write final seed to paper immediately

⚠️ CRITICAL: Never save anything to disk. All data stays in RAM.


Step 8: Shutdown and Verify Data Erasure

# Stop the Python server (not strictly necessary, but good practice)
killall python3

# Power off Ubuntu Live
sudo poweroff

# Physical verification:
□ Remove both USB drives
□ All RAM contents are erased (power loss = data loss)
□ No trace left on computer's hard drive

What just happened:

  • All seed operations occurred in RAM only
  • Python HTTP server never had external network access
  • SeedPGP never wrote to persistent storage
  • Shutdown wiped all RAM contents
  • Computer's hard drive was never touched (read-only boot)

Optional: Advanced Hardening

If you want to match TailsOS-level security:

1. Disable swap (already disabled by default, but verify):

sudo swapoff -a

2. Clear clipboard before shutdown:

# If you copied anything sensitive
echo "" | xclip -selection clipboard

3. Wipe RAM on shutdown (paranoid mode):

# For protection against cold-boot attacks (freezing RAM with liquid nitrogen)
sudo apt install secure-delete
sudo sdmem -v  # Takes ~2 min, overwrites RAM with random data

Note: For your threat model (protecting seeds from remote attackers, not physical access to frozen RAM), step 3 is unnecessary.


Ubuntu Live vs TailsOS: Summary

Use Ubuntu Live USB if:

  • You're already comfortable with Ubuntu
  • You only need offline seed operations
  • You want faster boot time
  • You value familiarity over maximum security

Use TailsOS if:

  • You want zero-config maximum security
  • You might need Tor for other operations
  • You're handling $100K+ and want the most audited option
  • You want automatic MAC randomization and anti-forensics

For your use case (three-hardware-wallet blend on Ubuntu Live): Perfectly safe.


🔐 Using SeedPGP: The Workflow

Step 1: Generate Entropy (New Seed)

SeedPGP offers multiple entropy sources you can combine:

🎲 Dice Rolls    - Physical randomness (99 rolls recommended)
🎥 Camera Noise  - Visual entropy from textured surfaces
🎵 Audio Input   - Microphone randomness from ambient sound

Recommended: Dice Rolls (Highest Trust)

  1. Click "Create" tab → "Dice Rolls"
  2. Roll physical dice 99 times
  3. Enter each result (1-6)
  4. App shows entropy progress bar
  5. Click "Generate Seed"
  6. Your 12 or 24-word mnemonic appears

⚠️ CRITICAL: Write down seed phrase on paper RIGHT NOW. Don't trust digital storage.

Step 2: Encrypt Your Seed

Option A: Password-Based Encryption (Simplest)

1. Your seed phrase is visible in the textarea
2. Enter a strong password (25+ characters):
   Example: "Tr0pic!M0nkey$Orange#2024@Secret%Phrase"
3. Confirm password
4. Click "Generate QR Backup"
5. Screenshot or print the QR code

Option B: PGP Key Encryption (Most Secure)

# Prerequisites: Have a PGP keypair (generate with GPG)
gpg --full-generate-key  # Follow prompts
gpg --armor --export your-email@example.com > public.asc

# In SeedPGP:
1. Click "PGP Key Input"
2. Paste your public key
3. App shows fingerprint → verify it matches
4. Click "Use This Key"
5. Click "Generate QR Backup"
6. Save QR code securely

Step 3: Test Recovery IMMEDIATELY

⚠️ DO NOT SKIP THIS STEP

1. Click "Restore" tab
2. Scan or upload your QR backup
3. Enter password OR provide private key
4. Verify decrypted seed matches original
5. If mismatch → ⚠️ DO NOT USE, redo backup

Why test? Better to find a corrupt backup now than during an emergency.

Step 4: Store Backups Securely

You now have:

  • Paper seed (12/24 words handwritten)
  • Encrypted QR code (digital backup)

Storage strategy:

Item Location Redundancy
Paper seed Safe deposit box Primary copy
Paper seed copy 2 Home safe Backup copy
QR code USB drive in safe Digital recovery
QR code copy 2 Cloud storage (encrypted!) Disaster recovery
Password/PGP key Password manager Encrypted separately

Geographic distribution: Keep copies in different physical locations (home, office, bank vault).


🧪 Development & Testing

Run Tests

# All tests
make test

# Individual test suites
bun test src/lib/bip39.test.ts
bun test src/lib/seedpgp.test.ts
bun test src/lib/krux.test.ts

Development Mode

# Hot reload development server
make dev

# With network blocking enabled by default
VITE_NETWORK_BLOCK=true make dev

Security Auditing

# Full security audit
make audit

# Output includes:
# - CSP configuration check
# - Network API usage analysis
# - Persistent storage detection
# - eval()/Function() detection
# - Defense-in-depth layer summary

🏗️ Build Artifacts Explained

make build-tails Output

dist-tails/
├── index.html          # CSP injected, relative paths
├── assets/
│   ├── index-*.js     # Main bundle (minified)
│   ├── index-*.css    # Styles
│   └── secp256k1.wasm # Crypto library
└── README.txt         # SHA-256 checksums + usage instructions

CSP Configuration (Embedded in HTML)

<meta http-equiv="Content-Security-Policy" 
      content="default-src 'self'; 
               script-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline' 'wasm-unsafe-eval'; 
               style-src 'self' 'unsafe-inline'; 
               img-src 'self' data: blob:; 
               connect-src 'none'; 
               font-src 'self'; 
               object-src 'none'; 
               base-uri 'self'; 
               form-action 'none';" 
      data-env="tails">

Key directive: connect-src 'none' — Browser refuses ALL network requests (fetch, XHR, WebSocket, etc.)


🛡️ Security Architecture

Defense-in-Depth Layers

Layer Mechanism Bypassable? Purpose
1. CSP connect-src 'none' in HTML No (browser enforced) PRIMARY DEFENSE
2. Network Blocker JS patches window.fetch/XHR Yes (console bypass) Defense-in-depth
3. Airgapped OS TailsOS, no network drivers No (physical isolation) Ultimate isolation
4. Session Crypto AES-256-GCM, non-exportable ⚠️ Memory dumps Protects cached data
5. Auto-Clear 10s clipboard wipe Yes (user can cancel) Reduces exposure window

Primary Security: CSP + TailsOS = two independent layers that must BOTH fail for compromise.

Threat Model

What SeedPGP Protects Against:

Browser extensions stealing seed
Malicious websites accessing clipboard
Network exfiltration attempts
Accidental data leaks to localStorage
Session replay attacks

What SeedPGP CANNOT Protect Against:

Compromised TailsOS ISO (verify signatures!)
Hardware keyloggers
Evil maid attacks (physical device tampering)
Memory dumps from privileged malware
Social engineering (phishing for password)

Mitigation: Use TailsOS (verified ISO) + physical security + test recovery immediately.


📖 Technical Documentation


🆘 Troubleshooting

Build Issues

# Permission denied during build
sudo chmod +x Makefile
make clean && make install

# Bun not found
curl -fsSL https://bun.sh/install | bash
source ~/.bashrc

# CSP not embedded
make clean build-tails
grep "Content-Security-Policy" dist-tails/index.html

TailsOS Issues

# Can't access localhost:8000
# → Check firewall: sudo ufw allow 8000
# → Use 127.0.0.1:8000 instead

# Bun installation fails
# → TailsOS persistence required
# → Use temporary session, re-install each boot

# Camera/microphone not working
# → TailsOS may block by default
# → Use dice rolls instead (recommended anyway)

Recovery Issues

# QR scan fails
# → Ensure good lighting, steady camera
# → Upload image file instead of scanning

# Decryption fails
# → Verify password exactly matches
# → Check PGP key fingerprint
# → QR may be damaged → test backup immediately after creation!

⚖️ License & Disclaimer

MIT License - See LICENSE file

⚠️ CRITICAL DISCLAIMER:

CRYPTOCURRENCY SECURITY IS YOUR RESPONSIBILITY.

This software is provided "AS IS", without warranty of any kind.

1. TEST with small amounts ($1-10) before trusting with real funds
2. VERIFY recovery works immediately after creating backup
3. STORE multiple copies in geographically distributed locations
4. USE TailsOS for amounts > $10K
5. CONSULT professional security advice for amounts > $100K

Your seed phrase = your funds. Lose the seed = lose the funds.
The author is NOT responsible for:
- Lost funds due to bugs, user error, or hardware failure
- Compromised devices or insecure storage
- Forgotten passwords or lost backups

If you don't understand how this works, start with $10 and test thoroughly.

🙏 Credits & Security

Author: kccleoc
Security Audit: v1.4.7 (February 2026) - No exploits found
License: MIT

Report Security Issues:

Dependencies Audited:

  • OpenPGP.js v5.11+
  • BIP39 reference implementation
  • jsQR for QR scanning
  • secp256k1 WASM module

🚀 Quick Reference Card

# === PRODUCTION WORKFLOW (TailsOS) ===
make full-build-tails    # Build + verify + audit
make serve-local         # Serve on localhost:8000

# === DEVELOPMENT ===
make dev                 # Hot reload
make test                # Run tests
make audit               # Security audit

# === VERIFICATION ===
make verify-tails        # Check CSP, checksums, paths
grep "connect-src" dist-tails/index.html  # Manual CSP check

# === CLEANUP ===
make clean               # Remove all build artifacts

Remember: More funds = more security steps. Don't skip TailsOS for serious amounts.

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