Ledger, the crypto industry’s leading hardware wallet manufacturer, rolled out a new recovery feature this month that caused an uproar. The recovery service has dangerous implications for crypto self-custody, says Foundation Devices Head of Content “Seth For Privacy.” He joins the show to discuss the downsides of closed-source code and the security risks that come with compromising for mainstream adoption.

Listen to the episode on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Overcast, Podcast Addict, Pocket Casts, Stitcher, Castbox, Google Podcasts, TuneIn, Amazon Music, or on your favorite podcast platform.
Show highlights:

how Ledger Recover works and why it caused an outrage in the crypto community

why the fact that Ledger’s code is not open-source could be considered a problem

what the concerns are about handing over additional data to Ledger

how darknet markets have always existed for fake ID verifications and how it relates to Ledger’s new feature

some of Ledger’s previous security lapses 

why introducing a trusted third party undermines one of Bitcoin’s most central tenets

whether Ledger’s move is a “net good for society,” and whether people actually want a service like this in a hardware wallet

whether something will go wrong with Ledger in the future

Thank you to our sponsors!

Crypto.com

Railgun DAO 

Stader Labs

Guest
Seth for Privacy, blogger and head of content at Foundation Devices

Blog

Foundation Devices

Twitter thread on the logistics and risks of the Ledger recovery process

Links

Ledger CTO Twitter thread on Ledger Recover 

CoinDesk: Ledger Bats Back Criticism of New Wallet Recovery Service, CoinDesk 

Unchained: ‘Backdoor’ for Seed Phrases? Ledger’s New Recovery Feature Spooks Users

Ledger Recover webpage

Haseeb Qureshi’s thread on the Ledger controversy

Past Ledger security issues

CoinDesk: Crypto Wallet Maker Ledger Loses 1M Email Addresses in Data Theft

Cointelegraph: Ledger data leak: A ‘simple mistake’ exposed 270K crypto wallet buyers

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Ledger, the crypto industry’s leading hardware wallet manufacturer, rolled out a new recovery feature this month that caused an uproar. The recovery service has dangerous implications for crypto self-custody, says Foundation Devices Head of Content “Seth For Privacy.” He joins the show to discuss the downsides of closed-source code and the security risks that come with compromising for mainstream adoption.


Listen to the episode on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Overcast, Podcast Addict, Pocket Casts, Stitcher, Castbox, Google Podcasts, TuneIn, Amazon Music, or on your favorite podcast platform.

Show highlights:


how Ledger Recover works and why it caused an outrage in the crypto community
why the fact that Ledger’s code is not open-source could be considered a problem
what the concerns are about handing over additional data to Ledger
how darknet markets have always existed for fake ID verifications and how it relates to Ledger’s new feature
some of Ledger’s previous security lapses 
why introducing a trusted third party undermines one of Bitcoin’s most central tenets
whether Ledger’s move is a “net good for society,” and whether people actually want a service like this in a hardware wallet
whether something will go wrong with Ledger in the future
Thank you to our sponsors!
Crypto.com

Railgun DAO 
Stader Labs
Guest

Seth for Privacy, blogger and head of content at Foundation Devices


Blog
Foundation Devices
Twitter thread on the logistics and risks of the Ledger recovery process
Links
Ledger CTO Twitter thread on Ledger Recover 
CoinDesk: Ledger Bats Back Criticism of New Wallet Recovery Service, CoinDesk 
Unchained: ‘Backdoor’ for Seed Phrases? Ledger’s New Recovery Feature Spooks Users

Ledger Recover webpage
Haseeb Qureshi’s thread on the Ledger controversy

Past Ledger security issues


CoinDesk: Crypto Wallet Maker Ledger Loses 1M Email Addresses in Data Theft

Cointelegraph: Ledger data leak: A ‘simple mistake’ exposed 270K crypto wallet buyers


Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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