Just wrapped up a few intense days at Bitcoin Ireland in Dublin.
Really good event. Good people. Good conversations.
Loïc Ruchat-Leuthard represented BitVault on stage talking about self custody, coercion resistance, and why Bitcoin security has to evolve beyond simple key protection.
Meanwhile the rest of us spent most of the conference doing what these events are really about:
meeting people, exchanging ideas, discussing failure models, operational risk, and how real-world Bitcoin usage changes the threat landscape entirely.
One thing became very clear during many conversations:
more and more people understand that Bitcoin security is not only a cryptography problem anymore.
It’s increasingly an architectural and human one.
Huge thanks to the organizers, to John Waldron, and to everyone who spent time with us during the event.
Dublin was special.
Really good event. Good people. Good conversations.
Loïc Ruchat-Leuthard represented BitVault on stage talking about self custody, coercion resistance, and why Bitcoin security has to evolve beyond simple key protection.
Meanwhile the rest of us spent most of the conference doing what these events are really about:
meeting people, exchanging ideas, discussing failure models, operational risk, and how real-world Bitcoin usage changes the threat landscape entirely.
One thing became very clear during many conversations:
more and more people understand that Bitcoin security is not only a cryptography problem anymore.
It’s increasingly an architectural and human one.
Huge thanks to the organizers, to John Waldron, and to everyone who spent time with us during the event.
Dublin was special.
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