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by JonathanBeuys 1397 days ago
For the average use "handle a private key" just means installing an app. If crypto currencies were popular enough, it would already come with a phone, just like a browser.

People already keep super important stuff on their phones. Their email accounts, their lifetimes photos, their contacts, their notes... Losing those seems to be more dangerous than losing your digital wallet. An event that would be similar to losing your physical wallet.

1 comments

Loosing my physical wallet will cost me: About a hundred euros (cash), the annoyance of having to get a replacement for the cards: - ID (probably 4 weeks or so and a visit to my Bürgeramt) - Medical Insurance (probably a week and a phone call) - 2 credit cards and a bank card (one, maybe two phone calls and a couple of euros) - a handful of membership cards, non of which are card only and only there for backup to the corresponding app I would say the total loss of this rounds to 100 euros and a couple of phone calls.

Your equivalent is not "loosing your wallet, it's loosing access to your bank account (which would cost at least thousands of euros). There is a difference! No, being in physical possession of my bank card doesn't give you the right to the contents of it. And there are _lots_ of redundant security layers beyond the simple card.

False equivalence. If you lose your crypto hot wallet, you might lose $100 as well. Much less of a hassle than losing your physical wallet with several important credit, debit, health, driver’s, and ID cards.

A hot wallet is meant to be used like cash in your pocket. Putting thousands or millions of dollars in your pocket would be unwise. The same logic should apply to a hot wallet.

You can store higher amount of wealth in a cold wallet, like a multi sig or smart contract wallet that has social recovery and transfer protection.