Stupid shit keeps happening

I did! But maybe I'm not asking the question the right way. Google just gave me a bunch of gobbledygook as well as Claude.

Source: https://share.google/aimode/q1OCsdVgv7QPmBbci

What Happens Based on the Address Type
  • Valid Unowned Address: The crypto goes to an address that exists mathematically but has no owner. The funds sit there permanently inaccessible. [1, 2]
  • Valid Owned Address: The crypto arrives in a stranger's wallet. You can only get it back if they voluntarily choose to send it back. [1, 2]
  • Invalid Address: Many wallets and exchanges will detect typos or mismatched network formats and block the transaction before it is sent. [1, 2]
  • Wrong Network: Sending crypto to the correct address but on the wrong blockchain (like sending Bitcoin to an Ethereum address) can sometimes be recovered if you own the private keys to the destination wallet. [1, 2, 3]
 
Source: https://share.google/aimode/q1OCsdVgv7QPmBbci

What Happens Based on the Address Type
  • Valid Unowned Address: The crypto goes to an address that exists mathematically but has no owner. The funds sit there permanently inaccessible. [1, 2]
  • Valid Owned Address: The crypto arrives in a stranger's wallet. You can only get it back if they voluntarily choose to send it back. [1, 2]
  • Invalid Address: Many wallets and exchanges will detect typos or mismatched network formats and block the transaction before it is sent. [1, 2]
  • Wrong Network: Sending crypto to the correct address but on the wrong blockchain (like sending Bitcoin to an Ethereum address) can sometimes be recovered if you own the private keys to the destination wallet. [1, 2, 3]

Exodus will let you send USDC -Eth to a PYUSD -Eth address but it then it's just gone.
It was my fault, just did it in a hurry and I accept my mistake. Where is it? I don't see the answer in what you shared.
 
I am going to digress (because I am curious) has anyone here ever received a random payment from nowhere? I see people saying they sent to the wrong wallet so frequently, it has me wondering.
 
I am going to digress (because I am curious) has anyone here ever received a random payment from nowhere? I see people saying they sent to the wrong wallet so frequently, it has me wondering.
If it is a very small amount you receive randomly it could be a dusting attack.

 
Exodus will let you send USDC -Eth to a PYUSD -Eth address but it then it's just gone.
It was my fault, just did it in a hurry and I accept my mistake. Where is it? I don't see the answer in what you shared.

Source: https://share.google/aimode/VtJ5nLHqqCFi25ImF
You can transfer your ERC-20 (Ethereum network) USD Coin (USDC) to a PYUSD wallet address on the Ethereum network. Since both tokens exist on the Ethereum network as ERC-20 tokens, they are natively compatible.
Do you own the PYUSD-ETH address? The information linked earlier talks about what happens for different cases for the target address - no?

What happened though? How did you pick that particular address?
 
Source: https://share.google/aimode/VtJ5nLHqqCFi25ImF

Do you own the PYUSD-ETH address? The information linked earlier talks about what happens for different cases for the target address - no?

What happened though? How did you pick that particular address?
I copied the address from my PP crypto wallet and put in Exodus and sent it. Never came to my PP wallet and PP told me to pound sand when I contacted their support. Exodus told me to contact PP in French. 😄
PP changes your wallet address everytime you go to retrieve it so I couldn't go back and compare that it was the same address.
 
I copied the address from my PP crypto wallet and put in Exodus and sent it. Never came to my PP wallet and PP told me to pound sand when I contacted their support. Exodus told me to contact PP in French. 😄
PP changes your wallet address everytime you go to retrieve it so I couldn't go back and compare that it was the same address.
That seems very strange. I don't use PP, so can't speak to its peculiarities. But crypto in general is very traceable. There are tools to check the path of the transaction in the blockchains. And I find it hard to believe that there isn't tracking built into Exodus and PP to be able to trace the transaction.

You initially said it was "your mistake". What was the mistake in your understanding? I mean, if you actually own the target address, and there was no copy and paste error, this may be redeemable.

You may want to try this:


I can try and help, if you like. Is the amount big enough for the trouble?

Also:

 
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That seems very strange. I don't use PP, so can't speak to its peculiarities. But crypto in general is very traceable. There are tools to check the path of the transaction in the blockchains. And I find it hard to believe that there isn't tracking built into Exodus and PP to be able to trace the transaction.

You initially said it was "your mistake". What was the mistake in your understanding? I mean, if you actually own the target address, and there was no copy and paste error, this may be redeemable.

You may want to try this:


I can try and help, if you like. Is the amount big enough for the trouble?

Also:

It was $300. Thanks for offering to help. But then I think is this a recovery scam? I don't know you. 😄
I can see it was successful in the Etherscan transaction details page.
 
But then I think is this a recovery scam? I don't know you. 😄
Yes - it is good to be careful. I withdraw my offer😛. I was a little hesitant in the first place, exactly because of how this comes across. But it seems like you know what you are doing, anyways. Good luck.
 
Yes - it is good to be careful. I withdraw my offer😛. I was a little hesitant in the first place, exactly because of how this comes across. But it seems like you know what you are doing, anyways. Good luck.
I'm am much smarter and slower when doing anything with crypto and I appreciate your offer. Still not a crypto fan. 😄
 

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