🌍The head of the famous “Bitcoin Family,” Didi Taihuttu, has seriously rethought how his family stores their digital fortune. The reason? A growing wave of offline crimes targeting crypto holders. According to CNBC, the family’s private keys are now hidden across four continents.
The Taihuttus rose to fame in 2017 after selling all their belongings and investing everything in bitcoin ₿. Since then, they’ve not only tracked the price but also upgraded their security practices. Hardware wallets are out — now they use a hybrid system: seed phrases are encrypted, split, with some stored on the blockchain , others engraved on metal plates and hidden in secret locations.
Didi even added personal encryption to some phrases, so that even at gunpoint he couldn’t give up the whole set. “There’s just a bit on my phone. You’ll need a plane to get to the rest,” he explains.
🚀 Around 65% of the family’s crypto is in cold storage. They plan to touch it only if bitcoin hits $1 million — a milestone Didi predicts by 2033.
For daily spending and trading, they use a hot wallet with multisig access via Safe , which requires confirmation from multiple parties. “What if a centralized service goes bankrupt? Will I still have access? Better to be your own bank,” Didi says.
Out of safety concerns, the family has largely disappeared from public view. After strangers began messaging them with their home address, the Taihuttus relocated and stopped filming at home.
📱 “My kids read the news. After they heard about the attempted kidnapping of a crypto CEO’s daughter in France, they asked, ‘What if it happens to us? Do we have a plan?’” Didi shares.
Since then, France is off-limits — and so is the spotlight.
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