Skip to main content

Security Properties

The smart account validation architecture provides several security properties:

No Single Private Key Dependency

Unlike EOA wallets that rely on a single private key, smart accounts use:
  • Multiple authorization mechanisms
  • Policy-based validation rules
  • Separation of identity verification from transaction signing
  • Reduced impact of key compromise
This architecture limits the risk associated with private key exposure.

Policy-Based Validation

Transaction validation is governed by configurable policies rather than fixed cryptographic checks:
  • Customizable validation rules
  • Support for multi-factor authorization
  • Integration with identity verification systems
  • Extensible validation logic
Policies can be updated to adapt to changing security requirements without changing the core wallet infrastructure.

Future Extensibility

The smart account architecture supports future enhancements:
  • Additional validation mechanisms
  • New authorization methods
  • Integration with emerging identity systems
  • Support for advanced security features
This extensibility enables the wallet to evolve with changing requirements and security standards.

On-Chain Verification

All validation logic executes on-chain, providing:
  • Transparent validation rules
  • Verifiable transaction authorization
  • Audit trail of validation decisions
  • Network-level consensus on authorization
On-chain validation ensures that validation rules are publicly verifiable and cannot be bypassed.