Self-custody
Self-custody privacy best practices for serious crypto users
Self-custody gives users control over their assets, but it also increases responsibility for privacy and operational security. Good privacy posture is rarely one feature. It comes from a consistent set of behaviors that reduce unnecessary exposure over time.
Avoid repeated address reuse
One of the simplest and most important practices is avoiding reuse of the same receiving address. Address reuse creates a long-term reference point that makes activity easier to analyze and connect.
Separate operational flows
Users should avoid collapsing every transaction type into one visible path. Separating wallets, use cases, and receiving patterns improves discretion and makes large-scale profiling more difficult.
Use privacy tools responsibly
Privacy tools should be used to reduce unnecessary public exposure in legitimate operations, not to suggest untraceability or unlawful evasion. Walloop fits into this model by improving transaction-flow privacy for self-custody users who want better control and less wallet exposure.
Continue exploring Walloop through the FAQ and the Privacy & Security page.