high ego walls you off, low ego connects. one craves worship, the other truth.
often, the weakest link in any system is the wetware
#seedphrases vs. #bitkey: tradeoffs, not tribes. #bitcoin gives you keys. everything else is a choice - and all choices come with tradeoffs. “seedless” 2-of-3 multisig. some call it safer. others call it a regression. here’s what’s actually true 👇 seed phrases aren’t sacred - they’re just one encoding of private key material. satoshi’s original wallet didn’t use them. they were introduced later for portability (bip39) - not because they’re the only secure path. they’re human-readable, but also human-volatile. seed phrases shine in 1 domain: minimizing third-party exposure. store a seed offline, generated locally, unlinked to your identity and you’re resilient to 6102-style confiscation (state-level seizure). you can bury it, memorize it, cross a border with nothing but your mind. but most people won’t. in real world: - seed phrases get saved in cloud notes - they’re stored in drawers or on usb sticks - they get lost in moves, fires or floods - they’re leaked during inheritance - or simply forgotten you trade government resilience for personal fragility. bitkey’s flips that tradeoff. - no seed phrases - no 1-of-1 single points of failure instead: - 2-of-3 multisig across phone, hardware, and a server key - recovery tools built in (cloud, delay+notify, social, break glass) - no single compromise = loss of funds you don’t memorize entropy - you coordinate recovery. what you gain with bitkey: - protection from accidental loss (most common failure mode) - built-in redundancy - lose 1 of 3 keys, still recover - anti-coercion (wrench attacks): hardware + server never co-sign together - no fragile paper backup to lose, leak or mishandle what you trade: - not 100% offline sovereignty - recovery requires access to a device, hardware or cloud - extreme scenarios (block disappears + you’re locked out of apple/google + lose hardware) require break glass process so is seedless safer? the honest answer: for most people, yes. - most users won’t properly protect a seed - most users will lose access to a device eventually - bitkey is designed for recoverability, not perfection for others - hardcore airgappers, border crossers, anti-state operatives - a properly managed seed may still rule. but it comes at a high cost: extreme discipline, custom tooling and constant opsec risk. bitcoin isn’t religion. it’s freedom of choice. some will keep using coldcard, trezor, seedsigner - and they should. others will use bitkey - and they’ll be safer than with nothing or a half-remembered 12-word phrase. a bigger self-custody pie helps us all. what matters is this: self-custody doesn’t mean you memorize your keys. it means you hold them. bitkey does that - just with better defaults for the next 100 million customers. choose what works for your threat model. respect others models too. cheers!