
Bull Bitcoin (Beta)
Google PlayOur wallet review process
We examine wallets starting at the code level and continue all the way up to the finished app that lives on your device. Provided below is an outline of each of these steps along with security tips for you and general test results.
Released
31st October 2023
Custody
Self-custodial: The user holds the keys
As part of our Methodology, we ask: Is the product self-custodial?
The answer is "yes". The user has control of their own keys.
Read more
Application build
See the last Issue we created.
If you have a binary for a version that doesn't appear on the list, you can drop the file here to register it so somebody can verify its reproducibility:
Passed all 8 tests
We answered the following questions in this order:
The answer is "yes".
If the answer was "no", we would mark it as "Few users" and the following would apply:
The answer is "no". We marked it as "Few users".
We did not ask this question because we failed at a previous question.
If the answer was "no", we would mark it as "Few users" and the following would apply:
We focus on products that have the biggest impact if things go wrong and this one probably doesn’t have many users according to data publicly available.
The answer is "yes".
If the answer was "no", we would mark it as "Fake" and the following would apply:
The answer is "no". We marked it as "Fake".
We did not ask this question because we failed at a previous question.
If the answer was "no", we would mark it as "Fake" and the following would apply:
The bigger wallets often get imitated by scammers that abuse the reputation of the product by imitating its name, logo or both.
Imitating a competitor is a huge red flag and we urge you to not put any money into this product!
The answer is "yes".
If the answer was "no", we would mark it as "Not a wallet" and the following would apply:
The answer is "no". We marked it as "Not a wallet".
We did not ask this question because we failed at a previous question.
If the answer was "no", we would mark it as "Not a wallet" and the following would apply:
If it’s called “wallet” but is actually only a portfolio tracker, we don’t look any deeper, assuming it is not meant to control funds. What has no funds, can’t lose your coins. It might still leak your financial history!
If you can buy Bitcoins with this app but only into another wallet, it’s not a wallet itself.
The answer is "yes".
If the answer was "no", we would mark it as "A wallet but not for Bitcoin" and the following would apply:
The answer is "no". We marked it as "A wallet but not for Bitcoin".
We did not ask this question because we failed at a previous question.
If the answer was "no", we would mark it as "A wallet but not for Bitcoin" and the following would apply:
At this point we only look into wallets that at least also support BTC.
The answer is "yes".
If the answer was "no", we would mark it as "Can't send or receive bitcoins" and the following would apply:
The answer is "no". We marked it as "Can't send or receive bitcoins".
We did not ask this question because we failed at a previous question.
If the answer was "no", we would mark it as "Can't send or receive bitcoins" and the following would apply:
If it is for holding BTC but you can’t actually send or receive them with this product then it doesn’t function like a wallet for BTC but you might still be using it to hold your bitcoins with the intention to convert back to fiat when you “cash out”.
All products in this category are custodial and thus funds are at the mercy of the provider.
The product cannot be independently verified. If the provider puts your funds at risk on purpose or by accident, you will probably not know about the issue before people start losing money. If the provider is more criminally inclined he might have collected all the backups of all the wallets, ready to be emptied at the press of a button. The product might have a formidable track record but out of distress or change in management turns out to be evil from some point on, with nobody outside ever knowing before it is too late.The answer is "yes".
If the answer was "no", we would mark it as "Custodial: The provider holds the keys" and the following would apply:
The answer is "no". We marked it as "Custodial: The provider holds the keys".
We did not ask this question because we failed at a previous question.
If the answer was "no", we would mark it as "Custodial: The provider holds the keys" and the following would apply:
A custodial service is a service where the funds are held by a third party like the provider. The custodial service can at any point steal all the funds of all the users at their discretion. Our investigations stop there.
Some services might claim their setup is super secure, that they don’t actually have access to the funds, or that the access is shared between multiple parties. For our evaluation of it being a wallet, these details are irrelevant. They might be a trustworthy Bitcoin bank and they might be a better fit for certain users than being your own bank but our investigation still stops there as we are only interested in wallets.
Products that claim to be non-custodial but feature custodial accounts without very clearly marking those as custodial are also considered “custodial” as a whole to avoid misguiding users that follow our assessment.
This verdict means that the provider might or might not publish source code and maybe it is even possible to reproduce the build from the source code but as it is custodial, the provider already has control over the funds, so it is not a wallet where you would be in exclusive control of your funds.
We have to acknowledge that a huge majority of Bitcoiners are currently using custodial Bitcoin banks. If you do, please:
- Do your own research if the provider is trust-worthy!
- Check if you know at least enough about them so you can sue them when you have to!
- Check if the provider is under a jurisdiction that will allow them to release your funds when you need them?
- Check if the provider is taking security measures proportional to the amount of funds secured? If they have a million users and don’t use cold storage, that hot wallet is a million times more valuable for hackers to attack. A million times more effort will be taken by hackers to infiltrate their security systems.
The answer is "yes".
If the answer was "no", we would mark it as "No source for current release found" and the following would apply:
The answer is "no". We marked it as "No source for current release found".
We did not ask this question because we failed at a previous question.
If the answer was "no", we would mark it as "No source for current release found" and the following would apply:
A wallet that claims to not give the provider the means to steal the users’ funds might actually be lying. In the spirit of “Don’t trust - verify!” you don’t want to take the provider at his word, but trust that people hunting for fame and bug bounties could actually find flaws and back-doors in the wallet so the provider doesn’t dare to put these in.
Back-doors and flaws are frequently found in closed source products but some remain hidden for years. And even in open source security software there might be catastrophic flaws undiscovered for years.
An evil wallet provider would certainly prefer not to publish the code, as hiding it makes audits orders of magnitude harder.
For your security, you thus want the code to be available for review.
If the wallet provider doesn’t share up to date code, our analysis stops there as the wallet could steal your funds at any time, and there is no protection except the provider’s word.
“Up to date” strictly means that any instance of the product being updated without the source code being updated counts as closed source. This puts the burden on the provider to always first release the source code before releasing the product’s update. This paragraph is a clarification to our rules following a little poll.
We are not concerned about the license as long as it allows us to perform our analysis. For a security audit, it is not necessary that the provider allows others to use their code for a competing wallet. You should still prefer actual open source licenses as a competing wallet won’t use the code without giving it careful scrutiny.
The product cannot be independently verified. If the provider puts your funds at risk on purpose or by accident, you will probably not know about the issue before people start losing money. If the provider is more criminally inclined he might have collected all the backups of all the wallets, ready to be emptied at the press of a button. The product might have a formidable track record but out of distress or change in management turns out to be evil from some point on, with nobody outside ever knowing before it is too late.Application build test result
Verification 2025-01-12 for version 0.4.0
We have successfully integrated the bullbitcoin dockerfile with the testAAB.sh script, which now passes on the location of the device-spec.json file.
$ ./testAAB.sh -d /var/shared/apk/com.bullbitcoin.mobile/0.4.0/ -s /var/shared/device-spec/a11/device-spec.json
========================================
Diff results
*Excludes AndroidManifest.xml and other signing related diffs.
armeabi_v7a.apk - nonverifiable
6a6747180656be691839738a8c5c40528afc7820cb7355e1f7fde7515c99997f - Official 8329375919aa765b863b5be3655b6b193c85487bb67f752de67f49f4eedacd34 - Built
- libapp.so
- libboltz_dart.so
- libllwk_dart.so
- libpayjoin_flutter.so
The .so files listed are shared object libraries commonly used in Android applications.
- libapp.so: This is likely a core library for the application, containing essential native code used by the app.
- libboltz_dart.so: This library is probably related to the Boltz service, which is used for atomic swaps and other cryptocurrency-related operations. The dart suffix indicates it is used with Dart, the programming language behind Flutter.
- libllwk_dart.so: This library might be related to a specific functionality or service within the app, with llwk being an acronym or shorthand for that service. The dart suffix again indicates usage with Dart.
- libpayjoin_flutter.so: This library is likely related to the PayJoin protocol, a privacy-enhancing Bitcoin transaction method. The flutter suffix indicates it is used within a Flutter application.
base.apk - nonverifiable
eda2f8e832d5d07b2269ef444618f9d1b784e523d145243822680a8947d153b7 - Official 2adc1b2499a0a23816787328b002da200f4cccefc9749a2aeadc18bdce72a8e8 - Built
- splits0.xml
en.apk - reproducible
ddaf3734e4510459ae5f0fbbf862532536bcac912e70945cd55e03be6019de93 - Official a2a0341f6aff908007c27d733532d238f90016b81748b08d866d07e82864f4b9 - Built
- Only signing-related diffs
xhdpi.apk - reproducible
e1f06b911d85898bf1d9ca55064d2b586c55ea2ef4dafc71876fe4323e28198d - Official 65040fb889b99303f5fa7fe91ad5d58f996a19bbd16bdee711618b8c7e5b631a - Built
- Only signing-related diffs
Diffoscope results
armeabi_v7a
base
Asciicast
Conclusion
Even if we exclude the signing related diffs, the above results lead us to conclude that version 0.4.0 of the app is nonverifiable
Previous Review 2024-08-30
App Description from Google Play
Bull Bitcoin Mobile is a self-custodial Bitcoin and Liquid Network which offers non-custodial atomic swaps across Bitcoin, Lightning and Liquid.
General features
- Non-custodial: private keys are generated on the device, and never leave the device.
- Multiple wallets can be created. Users can switch easily from one wallet to the other on the wallet homepage.
- Walets with BIP39 passphrases can be created.
- Amounts can be viewed as Bitcoin or Sats.
- Users can enable RBF for each transaction.
- Users can send the full wallet balance (sweep a wallet).
Analysis
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We were given the 12-word phrase during the wallet creation stage
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The app has lightning, Bitcoin and liquid wallets.
Tests performed by Daniel Andrei R. Garcia
Do your own research
In addition to reading our analysis, it is important to do your own checks. Before transferring any bitcoin to your wallet, look up reviews for the wallet you want to use. They should be easy to find. If they aren't, that itself is a reason to be extra careful.