Hardware crypto wallet firm Ledger has faced harsh criticism from the crypto community after announcing its “Recover” service, which is an optional paid feature that will eventually allow users to back up and restore their private seed phrase.
Due to concerns expressed about the security elements of Ledger Recover, the hardware wallet manufacturer decided to postpone the launch of its service. On May 23, Charles Guillemet, chief technology officer of Ledger, explained in a Twitter thread that Ledger will “accelerate our open-sourcing roadmap to bring more verifiability to everything we do.”
Ledger’s mission is, and will always be, to provide our users with the right tools to own their digital value securely.We have decided to accelerate our open-sourcing roadmap to bring more verifiability to everything we do.A thread pic.twitter.com/Dv0jBCM4Ys
Ledger CEO Pascal Gauthier told Cointelegraph that Ledger Recover would launch once the company can open-source the code behind the Recover protocol. He further stressed that the new service is optional:
According to Gauthier, the goal behind Ledger Recover is to onboard the next 100 million users to the crypto sector. Yet, to achieve this, he believes that “access to secure self-custody should be much easier.”
While this may be the case, the concept behind Ledger Recover has upset many of the company’s current users. Shahar Madar, head of security products at Fireblocks — an institutional digital asset custody platform — told Cointelegraph that Ledger Recover goes against the core ideals of Ledger’s customers:
“In this case, the user is trusting the providers to follow the procedures, and there are inherent risks there,” he said.
Although Ledger Recover has created uproar in the crypto
Read more on cointelegraph.com