US financial regulators just put out a new guide on crypto asset custody—and it's actually worth reading if you hold any digital assets.
The bulletin breaks down the essentials: how custody actually works under the hood, why hot wallets and cold wallets serve different purposes, and what you should know before choosing between self-custody and third-party platforms.
They walk through the trade-offs pretty clearly. Self-custody means you control your keys—full sovereignty, but you own all the operational risk. Third-party custody? Convenience and professional infrastructure, but you're trusting someone else with access.
The guide also flags specific red flags worth watching: what questions to ask providers, common security pitfalls, and practical steps to reduce exposure. Stuff like understanding insurance coverage, verifying security practices, checking regulatory compliance.
If you're still figuring out how to store your crypto safely, this one's a solid primer on fundamentals. Not financial advice—just regulatory clarity on what due diligence actually looks like.
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AlwaysMissingTops
· 12-16 22:02
Finally, someone has clarified this: managing your private keys means taking on the risk yourself, handing them over to the platform is a gamble on their integrity, and there is no absolute security.
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GateUser-0717ab66
· 12-16 20:31
To be honest, the regulatory authorities have finally figured it out.
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DAOdreamer
· 12-16 08:52
No hype, no hate, finally this guide from the Americans is starting to make some sense.
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CountdownToBroke
· 12-13 22:55
Is it the regulatory authorities guiding us on how to store our coins again? Sounds nice, but isn't it just trying to control our money even more?
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NestedFox
· 12-13 22:54
Another official guide, sounding good... Can self-custody really let you walk away completely?
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GasFeeNightmare
· 12-13 22:50
Self-managed keys vs. custodial platform... It's that old problem again. I was still debating this at 3 a.m., and after doing the math, I found that self-management saves gas but costs more mental effort, while custodial requires paying more custody fees. It's a perfect cycle of both loss and savings.
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GigaBrainAnon
· 12-13 22:48
Keep the keys yourself or hand them over to the exchange... This is a long-standing debate, and it's good that regulatory agencies have finally issued guidelines.
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SerumSurfer
· 12-13 22:48
Another regulatory document... but this time they didn't talk nonsense. The trade-off between self-custody and leaving it to the platform is explained quite clearly.
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IfIWereOnChain
· 12-13 22:44
Damn, the regulatory authorities finally said something reasonable.
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GasWaster69
· 12-13 22:36
Another "Official Guide" is here. Keeping your keys yourself or handing them over to a third party—this is a common debate. In essence, it's a trade-off between freedom and security, depending on your personal risk tolerance.
US financial regulators just put out a new guide on crypto asset custody—and it's actually worth reading if you hold any digital assets.
The bulletin breaks down the essentials: how custody actually works under the hood, why hot wallets and cold wallets serve different purposes, and what you should know before choosing between self-custody and third-party platforms.
They walk through the trade-offs pretty clearly. Self-custody means you control your keys—full sovereignty, but you own all the operational risk. Third-party custody? Convenience and professional infrastructure, but you're trusting someone else with access.
The guide also flags specific red flags worth watching: what questions to ask providers, common security pitfalls, and practical steps to reduce exposure. Stuff like understanding insurance coverage, verifying security practices, checking regulatory compliance.
If you're still figuring out how to store your crypto safely, this one's a solid primer on fundamentals. Not financial advice—just regulatory clarity on what due diligence actually looks like.