Last year, a non-custodial wallet recovery service helped users recover over $2.5 million in locked assets, with the largest single recovery amount reaching $1.5 million. Among these successfully recovered assets, Bitcoin accounted for 70%, while the rest were various mainstream cryptocurrencies.
This platform currently supports popular hardware wallets and software wallets such as Ledger, Trezor, MetaMask, and others, basically covering most user wallet types. When a recovery is successful, the platform charges a 20% service fee — this pricing logic is actually quite reasonable, after all, for the owner of the locked assets, getting back 70-80% is much better than receiving nothing.
From this data, it can be seen that although self-managed wallets indeed give users full control over their assets, mistakes in operation can still lead to assets being frozen from time to time. The existence of such recovery tools is undoubtedly a good safeguard for Web3 users.
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ContractFreelancer
· 01-11 03:16
2.5 million USD, and this is still last year's data. How many people have fallen into pitfalls when managing their own wallets...
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UnluckyMiner
· 01-10 12:34
Haha, I knew it. Self-managed wallets are a double-edged sword; a slip of the hand could wipe out a year's worth of effort.
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GasFeeCry
· 01-08 20:07
2.5 million USD? How many operational mistakes does that take? I'm just worried that one day I'll also have to use this service.
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SocialFiQueen
· 01-08 20:02
A recovery rate of 2.5 million USD is so high, indicating that people are really still falling into this kind of trap. However, I'm also overwhelmed by the 20% fee... but it's definitely better than not getting anything back.
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FUDwatcher
· 01-08 19:53
2.5 million USD has been recovered, which shows that this kind of thing does happen quite often. It's time to think about whether you've done anything stupid.
Last year, a non-custodial wallet recovery service helped users recover over $2.5 million in locked assets, with the largest single recovery amount reaching $1.5 million. Among these successfully recovered assets, Bitcoin accounted for 70%, while the rest were various mainstream cryptocurrencies.
This platform currently supports popular hardware wallets and software wallets such as Ledger, Trezor, MetaMask, and others, basically covering most user wallet types. When a recovery is successful, the platform charges a 20% service fee — this pricing logic is actually quite reasonable, after all, for the owner of the locked assets, getting back 70-80% is much better than receiving nothing.
From this data, it can be seen that although self-managed wallets indeed give users full control over their assets, mistakes in operation can still lead to assets being frozen from time to time. The existence of such recovery tools is undoubtedly a good safeguard for Web3 users.