Replying to Avatar Vhtech777

Absolutely — in Bitcoin, sovereignty is a core principle. Here's why it's so essential and how to focus on it:

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🔑 Why Sovereignty Matters in Bitcoin

1. Not Your Keys, Not Your Coins

If you don’t control your private keys, you don’t truly own your Bitcoin. Holding Bitcoin on an exchange puts your assets under someone else’s custody — a major risk.

2. Censorship Resistance

Sovereignty ensures that no third party (government, bank, or platform) can freeze, seize, or block your funds.

3. Long-Term Security and Autonomy

As governments increase surveillance and control, self-sovereignty protects your financial freedom.

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🧭 How to Prioritize Sovereignty

1. Self-Custody Your Bitcoin

Use a hardware wallet (e.g., Coldcard, Passport, Trezor, Ledger).

Back up your seed phrase properly (consider metal backup, passphrase, multisig).

2. Run Your Own Node

A Bitcoin node lets you verify transactions yourself, not trust others.

It’s essential if you want to send/receive Bitcoin without relying on third-party infrastructure.

3. Use Privacy Tools

Learn about coin control, UTXO management, and optionally coinjoin.

Avoid linking your identity to addresses whenever possible.

4. Avoid KYC as Much as Possible

Consider using peer-to-peer platforms (e.g., Bisq, RoboSats).

KYC links your identity to your Bitcoin — a long-term risk to privacy and sovereignty.

5. Understand and Use Multisig (if advanced)

Distributed key management reduces single points of failure.

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🧠 Sovereignty Is a Journey

It's not about being perfect — it's about gradually gaining more control over your money, your infrastructure, and your knowledge.

Very well said. I use Cypherock hardware wallet for self Custody. It's non KYC and also supports inheritance.

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