![]() ![]() The new Brave wallet will be home to a user’s self-custodial (where the user controls the private key) cryptocurrency wallet, the Brave Rewards wallet *, credit cards, and other exchanges and custodians that we support (via OAuth) such as Uphold, Binance, and Gemini, among others. ![]() Permission prompts are tied into the Brave-standard, Chromium-based permission manager, and users can manage permissions across sites as they do with other Web permissions, such as geolocation requests. The wallet can make Ethereum calls (such as getting ERC-20 token balances), and send transactions (such as ERC-20 token sends). As of today, we have most of the UI built for desktop, Android, and iOS, and we’ve recently attached the UI on the desktop to our Hierarchical Deterministic (HD) wallet keyring controller. Our ambitions also go beyond Ethereum - we’re adding support for Bitcoin, Polygon, and more chains and L2 s. The new wallet will be available on both mobile and desktop. This native wallet will not require an extra background process (which entails operating system and memory overhead) as extensions such as MetaMask and our current wallet forked from MetaMask do. It will also support other EVM-compatible blockchains and have some chains preconfigured to use without any settings changes. At Brave, we want to make crypto usable and DeFi accessible for everyone, and towards these ends, we are excited to share the second update since we published the BAT Roadmap 2.0 in February 2021.īrave is building a native C++ implementation of an Ethereum remote client.
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