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Non-custodial staking

Participate in blockchain networks without giving up control of your assets.

Staking should not require custody

Staking and validators allow participation in blockchain infrastructure, but asset control must remain clear.

Snow Fall supports this logic: operate infrastructure while preserving the holder's sovereignty.

What to understand

The point is to separate network participation from control delegation.

Validators

Understand the operational role of a validator and the associated risks.

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Sovereignty

Keep control of assets while benefiting from technical support.

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Our view

  1. Separate custody and operation Clarify what is controlled by the client and what is technically operated.
  2. Ensure availability Monitor infrastructure and reduce interruptions.
  3. Document responsibilities Make roles and limits explicit.

Articles about staking and infrastructure

Frequently asked questions

What is non-custodial staking?

Non-custodial staking lets asset holders participate in network validation or delegation while keeping custody of their tokens in their own wallet.

Does validator hosting require giving up custody?

No. Validator or node operations can be supported technically while asset ownership and signing authority remain under the client control.

Who needs Web3 infrastructure support?

Crypto holders, validators, Web3 teams and projects may need node, RPC, monitoring or validator support to operate reliably.

What is the difference between staking and custody?

Staking is network participation. Custody is control of assets. A non-custodial architecture keeps those responsibilities separate.

Want to operate without giving up control?

Snow Fall can support your Web3 infrastructure.

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