Trezor

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Revision as of 21:28, 3 October 2024 by Edd (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{CryptoWallet |CryptoWalletName=Trezor |OfficialWebsite=https://trezor.io/ |HotWallet=0 |ColdWallet=1 |BrowserExtension=0 |MobileWallet=0 |HardwareWallet=1 |CustodialWallet=0 |NonCustodialWallet=1 |Bitcoin=1 |Ethereum=1 |EVMCompatible=1 |Tether=1 |BNB=1 |Solana=1 |USDC=1 |XRP=1 |Dogecoin=1 |Toncoin=0 |TRON=0 |Cardano=1 |Avalanche=1 |ShibaInu=1 |Chainlink=1 |BitcoinCash=1 |Polkadot=0 |Dai=1 |LEOToken=1 |NEARProtocol=1 |Uniswap=1 |Sui=0 |Litecoin=1 |Pepe=1 |InternetComput...")
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Official Website: https://trezor.io/


Popular coins and tokens supported include (in no particular order):

Bitcoin

Ethereum

Tether

BNB

Solana

USDC

XRP

Dogecoin

Cardano

Avalanche

Shiba Inu

Chainlink

Bitcoin Cash

Dai

LEO Token

NEAR Protocol

Uniswap

Litecoin

Pepe

Stellar

Monero

Immutable X

Aave

Optimism

Worldcoin

Tezos

Axie Infinity

Notes

  1. A cryptocurrency wallet not connected to the internet. These may be hardware devices or any media that can be used to record private keys or seed phrases, like simple pen and paper. Cold wallets are typically used for long-term storage since extra steps are required to broadcast transactions to the network. Physical devices acting as cold wallets are still susceptible to theft, damage, or other types of loss.
  2. A physical device intended to be kept offline in order to securely store the private keys used to access cryptocurrencies and other digital assets.
  3. A cryptocurrency wallet in which the owner has exclusive and full control over the private keys used to authorize transactions of digital assets on a blockchain. Owners of non-custodial wallets are fully responsible for the safety and security of the digital assets they manage.
  4. Acronym - Ethereum Virtual Machine