Seems nitpicky, but I'm going to distinguish between
- the Signing wallet client,
which can be fully "cold", offline and from a security POV should be air-gapped e.g. a hardware wallet, since it was likely exposed to the original seed, and certainly holds the private keys, and - the Broadcast wallet client,
which by definition needs to be "hot" or Online in order to communicate the signed transactions out onto the peer-to-peer BTC network of participating nodes.
Now, you may be running your own full node instance, but your signed raw transaction is not really "broadcast" in any sense, until it has reached many nodes around the internet, until it gets incorporated into a block.
The mode of transportation of that transaction data string between those two wallet-clients may be via data storage device, USB or SD card. It may use a QR code, which is probably most secure, or a Bluetooth or NFC channel, or indeed satellite, ham radio or SMS, but that data getting put out to the peer-to-peer Bitcoin node network requires connecting to the internetβthat is from a practical POV intrinsic to the definition of the broadcasting step.
You can get bonuses upto $100 FREE BONUS when you:
π° Install these recommended apps:
π² SocialGood - 100% Crypto Back on Everyday Shopping
π² xPortal - The DeFi For The Next Billion
π² CryptoTab Browser - Lightweight, fast, and ready to mine!
π° Register on these recommended exchanges:
π‘ Binanceπ‘ Bitfinexπ‘ Bitmartπ‘ Bittrexπ‘ Bitget
π‘ CoinExπ‘ Crypto.comπ‘ Gate.ioπ‘ Huobiπ‘ Kucoin.
Comments