Everyone thinks launching a crypto wallet is the hard part, but actually keeping it secure and running 24/7 is where most projects fail.

A lot of traders learn this the painful way. Funds get stuck during outages, withdrawals freeze, or a tiny bug becomes a full exploit while everyone sleeps. By the time users holding assets like $BTC, $ETH, or $BNB notice, the damage is already done.

Building the wallet is just step one. The real risk usually hides in three places: 1) monitoring , wallets handling real funds need constant oversight, not occasional checks; 2) patching , one missed security update can expose private key handling or signing logic; 3) infrastructure , nodes, RPC endpoints, and signing services must stay online every minute of the day. “24/7 support” isn’t marketing language. In crypto, it’s the minimum requirement.

Think of a wallet like a bank vault connected to the internet. If no one is watching the cameras at 3 a.m., that’s exactly when problems show up. The teams that survive are the ones treating operations like critical infrastructure, not a side task after launch.

So here’s the real question: when a project releases a new wallet, do you check who’s actually maintaining it around the clock?

#CryptoSecurity #WalletSafety #Web3