Institutional Crypto Wallet Startup Raises $6.5 Million, 'Eliminates Private Keys'

Published on by Cointele | Published on

Curv, a digital asset startup headquartered in the United States, has raised $6.5 million to launch a cloud-based digital asset wallet for financial institutions that does not use private keys, a company press release published on Feb. 26 reveals.

According to the statement, the seed round was led by digital asset investment company Digital Currency Group and Israeli cybersecurity company Team8.

The funds will reportedly be used to create an institutional digital wallet that allows institutions and enterprises to securely use digital assets and blockchain applications.

As explained in press release, the digital asset wallet will use multi-party computation protocols - a subfield of cryptography that develops methods allowing parties to jointly compute a function over their inputs without disclosing theirs amounts.

The need to use cold and hot wallets will be replaced by what the firm refers to as a software-only, cloud-based service.

Crypto companies have recently developed several crypto solutions for institutional investors following a growing demand from corporate clients.

Cryptocurrency exchange Seed CX - a Chicago-based licensed platform targeting institutional clients - launched a digital asset wallet solution with on-chain settlement.

Cryptocurrency hardware wallet manufacturer Ledger is also developing its own institutional custody offering, dubbed Ledger Vault.

The company has lately expanded to New York as part of developing the solution.

The apparent asset management debacle of now defunct crypto exchange QuadrigaCX continues to unfold, allegedly due to what Curv refers to as the "Single point of failure associated with the private keys."

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