Most people think crypto security means protecting yourself from hackers. But once the number gets big enough, everything changes. It is no longer only about phishing links, fake support agents, or leaked seed phrases.
It is also about the person who knows you hold crypto. The phone in your pocket. The wallet someone can force you to open. The family who may have no idea what to do if something happens to you.
This is the part of self-custody people rarely talk about. Bron was built for the moment crypto stops being a hobby and becomes real wealth.
Hidden accounts let you keep sensitive assets out of sight unless a separate PIN is entered. Policies let you decide in advance which transfers need extra approval, which amounts need delays, and which addresses are allowed.
So even if someone gains physical access to your device, they do not automatically get access to your funds.
And if something happens to you, Digital Inheritance gives your family a path to recover access without turning your self-custody setup into a treasure hunt.
At a certain level, holding crypto is not just about ownership. It is about making sure ownership survives pressure, mistakes, and time.