Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (MIT CSAIL) have been working on a new secure cryptocurrency hardware wallet, dubbed Notary.
According to the recently published technical paper, the new secure hardware wallet will run as a USB stick with a small display and buttons. Notary wallet has a set of hardware fail-safes designed to mitigate successful cyber attacks. Known as “reset-based switching,” the wallet will reset the CPU, memory, and other hardware components when a user switches between one app to another.
MIT researchers claim that Notary is way secure than any other existing commercial cryptocurrency hardware wallets as Notary eliminates entire classes of bugs that affect existing wallets and also may be able to enhance the overall security of transaction approval.
Notary follows the same approach as existing hardware wallets for handling device loss. The user backs up their master key so it can be restored to a new device. To prevent an adversary from using the lost device, Notary requires the user to enter a PIN to access any functions, with retry limits and hard reset after sufficiently many failures.
On July 16, 2025, crypto exchange BigONE confirmed that it was hacked. The attacker stole… Read More
Researchers uncovered coordinated campaign of over 40 malicious Firefox extensions. These add‑ons mimic trusted… Read More
Paris, France – French police arrested several suspects this week tied to disturbing May… Read More
PayPal just announced big plans for its stablecoin. The company wants to bring PayPal USD… Read More
Binance, the world's largest cryptocurrency exchange has announced its plans to delist and pause trading… Read More
LocalMonero, the peer-to-peer exchange platform for the privacy-focused cryptocurrency Monero (XMR), will be shutting down… Read More