From privacy browsers to self-custody banks, Veera's transformation journey is indeed bold.
Originally focused on ad-free privacy protection products, it now targets the new financial track in 2026. In the latest plan, users will have full control over their asset keys—this is true self-custody. The security layer adopts military-grade protocols, integrating biometric technology and distributed key sharding to ensure multiple protections for private key management.
What's even more interesting is the on-chain credit scoring system (FIS), which directly connects Web3 and traditional finance. A seemingly contradictory combination: on one side, extreme privacy and decentralized autonomy; on the other, deep integration with the traditional financial system. These two opposing demands are cleverly stitched together, and this product design approach is worth pondering.
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GasGoblin
· 01-11 07:56
Wow, this idea is truly brilliant. Privacy and the financial system are seamlessly integrated.
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HallucinationGrower
· 01-10 22:17
This move is quite bold—privacy browsers directly turning to self-custody banking... Feels like betting on the 2026 trend.
I need to take a close look at FIS's step to integrate traditional finance; isn't this just trying to have it both ways?
The security scheme of key sharding sounds impressive, but how it actually operates remains a question mark.
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OnchainHolmes
· 01-09 10:53
Ha, Veera's recent moves are indeed interesting. The collision of privacy and finance doesn't often produce such innovative approaches.
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Self-custody + on-chain credit scoring seem to be opposing concepts, but upon closer thought, they do address real pain points.
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This military-grade encryption sounds impressive, but the key is how well it performs in actual implementation.
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Launching in 2026, even if it sounds great now, we’ll have to wait and see. First impressions are half the battle.
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Key sharding + biometric authentication is a solid combo, but do users really need such complexity?
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From privacy to banking, what is Veera betting on? Will user trust conversion rates meet expectations?
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I'm a bit concerned about integrating with traditional finance. Privacy and credit systems are inherently at odds.
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NFT_Therapy_Group
· 01-09 10:51
Privacy and finance combined? That logic is a bit crazy, feels like a tug of war... But it won't be launched until 2026, so it's hard to say whether the market will still be alive by then.
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SybilAttackVictim
· 01-09 10:51
Privacy browsers jump to self-hosted banks? That's a pretty bold move, but I'm a bit confused about the on-chain credit scoring part. Isn't this just working for traditional finance?
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LiquidationAlert
· 01-09 10:25
Haha, Veera, this move is quite bold. How can privacy and the financial system be stitched together... It’s terrifying when you think about it carefully.
From privacy browsers to self-custody banks, Veera's transformation journey is indeed bold.
Originally focused on ad-free privacy protection products, it now targets the new financial track in 2026. In the latest plan, users will have full control over their asset keys—this is true self-custody. The security layer adopts military-grade protocols, integrating biometric technology and distributed key sharding to ensure multiple protections for private key management.
What's even more interesting is the on-chain credit scoring system (FIS), which directly connects Web3 and traditional finance. A seemingly contradictory combination: on one side, extreme privacy and decentralized autonomy; on the other, deep integration with the traditional financial system. These two opposing demands are cleverly stitched together, and this product design approach is worth pondering.