Posts in MultiSig (Multisignature)
Announcing Blockdaemon’s Acquisition of Sepior

Today, Blockdaemon is proud to announce the acquisition of Sepior, a leading data and digital asset security company focused on institutional-grade cryptographic key management and protection.

This marks the fourth acquisition in Blockdaemon’s portfolio to-date. It follows the successful onboarding of three innovative companies within two years, including Gem, Anyblock Analytics and Lunie.

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Attention Curv Wallet Customers - Change Brings Opportunity!

The March 8, 2021 announcement that PayPal agreed to acquire Curv was met by many in the industry with excitement, but for others concern. After all, it’s common for such acquisitions to lead to fundamental changes that require a new direction for the customers of the company being acquired. While change is never easy it also opens the door to new opportunities to select new solutions from the perspective of experience and insight on changing market requirements. As the original pioneer and industry leader in MPC and Threshold Cryptography (TC) schemes Sepior is helping many companies through this transition and stands ready to assist others.

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Minimize Ethereum Gas & Fees With MPC

Ethereum transaction fees have hit new highs in 2021. One of the factors is that the price of Ethereum has also hit new highs, but there’s much more to it. One way to minimize transaction fees is to use secure Multiparty Computation (MPC) for your multiple party approved transactions. In addition to minimizing the cost of your own transactions, you’ll maximize Ethereum’s throughput and contribute to reducing fees for everyone.

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Mind The Gap - Enforcing Quorum Policies

A quorum policy is a policy which is used to ensure that different stakeholders approve of some transaction to remove the single point of failure which occurs when only one entity is needed to approve a transaction. Ironically, many ways of implementing such a policy will introduce a technical single point of failure in the very solution intended to remove the original point of failure. The solution is to have each approver provide their share of an approval signature using a cryptographic algorithm which natively generates the transaction signature only when the required number of approvals is satisfied.

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