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Security

Digital sovereignty is freedom

Picture this: it’s 1689, and John Locke is furiously scribbling about how “every man has a property in his own person.” Fast forward to 2025, and that “property” includes your Bitcoin wallet, your encrypted passwords, and that embarrassing search history you’d rather forget. The philosophers were right about freedom and property — they just couldn’t imagine property would become ones and zeros floating in the cloud.

Neon-toned digital lock illustration

The quantum computer that will break your Bitcoin is already being built

Why wait for “quantum-proof” security until after you smell smoke? Imagine someone is recording every encrypted message you send today—banking details, seed phrases, late-night chats—and shelving them in a warehouse. They can’t read any of it yet, but they’re patient. They’re waiting for a special key that unlocks everything at once.

That key is a quantum computer powerful enough to crack today’s encryption. The warehouse is already being filled by nation-states and patient adversaries. The timeline? Shorter than your mortgage.

Abstract quantum circuitry illustration

The Encryption of Hope: Safeguarding the Intangible in a Chaotic World

You are standing on the edge of a vast, uncharted wilderness. Somewhere deep within lies a treasure that represents everything you value — your memories, your dreams, your identity. It is priceless, fragile, and irreplaceable. Would you leave it exposed to the elements, unprotected against time, theft, or decay? Or would you build an unbreakable vault to shield it, ensuring it remains untouched by the chaos of the world?