Custodial vs. Non-Custodial Wallets
Understanding the difference between custodial and non-custodial wallets is the first step to understanding what Walley does — and does not — do for you.Custodial Wallet
A third party (a bank, exchange, or app provider) holds your private keys on your behalf. You trust them to secure your funds and execute transactions when you request them. If they are hacked, go offline, or freeze your account, you may lose access to your funds.
Non-Custodial Wallet (Walley)
You hold your own private keys. No intermediary can access your funds, approve transactions, or recover your wallet. Your assets exist on the ledger and are controlled exclusively by the keys you possess.
| Custodial | Non-Custodial (Walley) | |
|---|---|---|
| Who holds your keys? | The service provider | You |
| Can the provider access your funds? | Yes | No |
| Can the provider recover your wallet? | Yes | No |
| Who approves transactions? | The provider (on your behalf) | You, directly |
| What happens if you lose credentials? | Provider can reset access | You must use your recovery phrase |
What Walley Can and Cannot Do
Walley is a non-custodial wallet interface for the Canton Network. It provides the tools to create and manage your wallet, sign transactions, and interact with decentralized applications — but it never takes custody of your assets.Walley does not store your private keys, does not have visibility into your balance through any custodial mechanism, and cannot initiate or reverse transactions on your behalf.
- Recover your wallet if you lose your passkey and recovery phrase
- View or access your funds independently
- Freeze, hold, or confiscate your assets
- Reverse a transaction you have submitted
- Generate and manage your cryptographic keys locally on your device
- Sign transactions using your passkey or recovery phrase session
- Connect to Canton Network dApps and services
- Display your on-ledger balances and transaction history