Episode notes
Time Stamps:
4:03 – Introduction
5:00 – How did Slush come up with the idea of creating a hardware wallet?
6:30 – Meeting Satoshi Labs & Trezor Co-Founder Stick
8:50 – Why the Trezor was designed in line with the Bitcoin philosophy so you can build your own and verify its code
10:30 – Peter Todd and Lazy Ninja liked the Trezor the most
12:25 – Why should bitcoiners use a hardware wallet?
13:00 – Satoshi Labs advised Crypto Steel
14:00 – When you need to do cryptographic operations that are enabled by hardware wallets
15:39 – Why should newcomers buy Trezor hardware wallets?
21:15 – Hardware is broken and lagging behind software
27:10 – The pros of Ledger
27:40 – The issues of Ledger
28:37 – The pros and cons of KeepKey
29:25 – The Coldcard wallet design & why it’s selling snake oil
30:40 – What can’t be verified about the Coldcard?
33:23 – Is physical security a marketing trap?
35:56 – What’s to like about the BitBox?
37:30 – What are the tradeoffs of the Trezor?
38:23 – Shamir Backup
45:10 – SLIP doesn’t stand for Stephan Livera Podcast
46:48 – Software before hardware
48:01 – Why is the Trezor so expensive if it’s so basic?
48:55 – Other companies taking Trezor’s open source software to create cheaper hardware wallet clones
54:12 – Is there demand for the BTC-only firmware?
55:33 – Multisig on the Trezor
1:00:39 – Who should use a multisig setup?
1:02:30 – When should you get a hardware wallet?
1:09:10 – Local software application for Trezor
1:12:00 – Running your Trezor with Electrum or Wasabi
1:13:05 – Does Trezor collect any user data?
1:16:30 – Trezor doesn’t know who you are
1:18:23 – What are Trezor’s future plans?