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Over the past few years, I’ve been thinking deeply about a question most people in crypto avoid: what happens to our digital assets — from Bitcoin to Ethereum — after we’re gone?
During a recent interview, Michael Saylor made a remark that beautifully captures the core of this topic. Here’s my short reflection inspired by that moment:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6QPB010U-tM
We spend years accumulating value on-chain, yet the tools for transferring that value across generations are still primitive. Traditional wills don’t map well to private keys. Custodial solutions break the entire premise of self-sovereignty. And “just give your seed phrase to someone” is neither secure nor private.
That tension — between independence and continuity — pushed me to rethink how trust, privacy, and ownership should evolve in the blockchain era.
This led me to build Miras.Global (https://miras.global) — an open-source protocol, not just a product, for trustless on-chain inheritance. It combines multi-sig logic, encrypted key escrow, attester-verified claims, and smart-contract-enforced waiting periods to enable a secure, decentralized, no-middlemen path to passing assets forward.
It’s already live on Ethereum mainnet, and you can safely test everything on Sepolia without touching your real assets.
If this topic resonates with you — whether you’re into crypto security, estate planning, or protocol design — feel free to explore, break, test, or contribute. This is an early step toward making digital inheritance a native building block of the blockchain world.
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