Latest technology articles
This article details how Vaultody’s MPC-powered Wallet-as-a-Service infrastructure lets businesses embed wallets while preserving end-user self-custody, enabling secure key management, recovery, and governance without custodial risk.
Learn how modern treasury teams can use MPC wallets, policy engines and multi-step approvals to manage corporate crypto balances safely, with full visibility and verifiable audit history.
An overview of how Vaultody 2.0 elevates Wallet-as-a-Service into a core enterprise solution, including multi-tenant architecture, governance capabilities, and integration options for banks, exchanges and fintechs.
This preview highlights the main architectural and product changes in Vaultody 2.0 across treasury management, direct custody and WaaS, and what they mean for institutional users.
A technology-focused comparison between Vaultody and Fireblocks across MPC design, policy controls, integrations, deployment model and operational risk.
Defines Custody-as-a-Service, explains how MPC infrastructure underpins CaaS, and shows when fintechs, neobanks and Web3 companies should use it instead of building custody stacks in-house.
Discusses how institutions can support BNB and other high-throughput networks using scalable WaaS, with attention to performance, risk controls and compliance.
Explains Vaultody’s WalletConnect integration and how it allows institutional MPC wallets to connect securely to Web3 dApps and DeFi protocols without compromising governance.
A practical guide for institutions on reducing custody risk, covering MPC architectures, segregation of duties, approvals, monitoring and contingency planning.
Compares Vaultody’s MPC and enclave-based approach to traditional hardware wallets and cold storage, focusing on security, availability and operational efficiency for institutions.
Analyses how changes to Ethereum gas limits influence transaction fees and throughput, and what this means for institutional transaction routing and wallet fee policies.
Explores combining MPC with secure hardware enclaves to further isolate key shares and signing operations, raising the bar for digital asset security in regulated environments.
Technology FAQ
What is an MPC wallet?
An MPC wallet uses multi-party computation to split private key material into independent shares that are held in different locations or systems. No single party ever holds the full key, and transactions are signed collaboratively, which reduces key theft risk and removes single points of failure.
How is Vaultody different from a traditional crypto custodian?
Vaultody provides non-custodial infrastructure rather than taking control of clients’ assets. Institutions use Vaultody to run their own MPC wallets, policies and workflows, while keeping ownership and control of private keys and funds.
Can I keep existing exchange and DeFi connectivity when using Vaultody?
Yes. Vaultody integrates with major blockchains, exchanges and DeFi tools such as WalletConnect so that you can access liquidity and protocols from secure institutional wallets instead of from retail-grade wallets.