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Hardware Wallet

What is a hardware wallet and why use one to store a tokenized domain?

Publié le 22 mai 2026Par Équipe Namefi
  • glossary

Langue d’origine: English

A hardware wallet is a small dedicated device — typically with a screen and one or two buttons — that stores a wallet's private keys offline and signs transactions on the device itself, so the keys never touch an internet-connected computer. Common examples include Ledger, Trezor, GridPlus Lattice, and Keystone. Because the signing operation happens inside the device's secure element, malware on a connected laptop cannot extract the key; the worst it can do is trick the user into approving a malicious transaction on the device screen — which is why "verify on device" matters. For high-value assets like tokenized domains, most owners use a hot wallet (browser extension) for day-to-day interaction and store the NFT on a hardware wallet for long-term custody. See Recovering a Tokenized Domain After Wallet Loss for how this fits into a broader recovery strategy.

Mots-clés associés

  • hardware wallet
  • cold wallet
  • Ledger
  • Trezor
  • GridPlus
  • Keystone
  • secure element
  • self-custody

À propos de l’auteur·rice

Équipe Namefi
Équipe Namefi • Namefi

Namefi est une équipe d’ingénieurs, de designers et d’opérateurs passionnés par la création d’outils qui simplifient la gestion de vos noms de domaine on-chain.