How Lorenzo Protocol secures its most critical keys 🔐
Lorenzo uses multi-sig wallets to control updates and sensitive operations, ensuring that no one person has total control. These wallets require multiple independent approvals before any action is executed, reducing the risk of misuse, hacks, or unilateral decisions.
Key holders are intentionally diverse and distributed —including main builders, trusted advisors, and infrastructure partners— with high approval thresholds and keys secured by hardware, geographically separated. Critical actions follow strict procedures, often using offline signing to eliminate the risks of remote attacks.
Most importantly, this setup is not permanent. As Lorenzo matures, control is designed to progressively shift towards DAO-governed structures, with full transparency in actions (not private keys). This creates a clear balance between security today and decentralization tomorrow.
Security by design, trust minimized over time.

