The FTX debacle sparked an increase in calls for crypto self-custody this week, including Binance CEO Changpeng Zhao describing it as a “fundamental human right.” However, some warn that there are still risks involved when opting to hold your digital assets on your own.
Vitalik Buterin, the co-founder of Ethereum, highlighted on Twitter that while the decentralized finance (DeFi) and self-custody ethos were popular this week, there are still risks involved. According to the Ethereum co-founder, bugs in smart contract code are some of these risks. To avoid the risks, Buterin also mentioned some tips such as keeping code simple, audits, formal verification and defense in depth.
Apart from smart contract bugs, transferring crypto assets after death also became a topic on social media. Bruce Fenton, an executive at broker Watchdog Capital, brought up some self-custody tests like asking the next of kin to retrieve one's coins as if they died. According to Fenton, without a plan for its inheritance, self-custody is incomplete. "It’s a gift to no one," he argued.
Tom Dunleavy, a research analyst at the crypto data platform Messari, brought demand for self-custody into the conversation. The analyst argued that self-custody is "not desired by 95% of the population."
Bankless is a meme not a reality Dad, grandma, and your friend joe don't to be their own bankThey want some level of safeguards and backupWe need to figure out a way to provide those if we want people to use crypto
According to Dunleavy, onboarding billions of users require safe, transparent and trustworthy custody work, and argued that most people want some safeguards and backup.
Related: The FTX contagion: Which companies were affected by the FTX collapse?
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