
4 min read
Behind the Scenes: How CoinsDo Is Powering a Safer, Scalable Future for Digital Asset Management
When BitCourier sat down with Daniel Tan, Business Development Manager at CoinsDo, the conversation revealed the philosophy or the “why” of CoinsDo: true security is both decentralized and accountable.
Since 2017, CoinsDo has evolved from blockchain security experiments into a Wallet-as-a-Service (WaaS) platform trusted by enterprises worldwide. With over 60 million wallet addresses and $2 billion in transactions, the company has maintained a rare record: zero security incidents in seven years.
Lessons from the Early Days
CoinsDo’s roots in blockchain security shaped its uncompromising approach to wallet design.
Early industry failures often came from a single point of weakness: key mismanagement and over-centralization.
The biggest security issue wasn’t just technical. It was organizational responsibility.
Daniel Tan
That insight led to CoinsDo’s framework where wallet owners alone control private keys, while finance and tech teams interact through approval workflows and APIs without directly touching the keys.
The result: verifiable security without sacrificing usability.
Redefining Enterprise Custody
In 2017, crypto custody was a binary choice. Institutions could only choose between a fully centralized option or a dangerously manual one.
CoinsDo saw a gap for enterprise-grade, non-custodial infrastructure that balances control with compliance.
We remove single points of failure and minimize human key exposure. Security shouldn’t depend on trust in people, but on verifiable processes
Daniel Tan
That principle now underpins every CoinsDo integration.
The State of Digital Asset Infrastructure
By 2025, institutional adoption of blockchain is no longer experimental — it’s operational.
A recent Chainalysis and BCG analysis shows 68 % of global banks exploring digital-asset integrations, yet over 40 % list private-key management as their top security concern.
This mismatch between demand and operational readiness defines today’s infrastructure race.
CoinsDo’s non-custodial architecture directly addresses it, offering enterprises verifiable control and full automation without re-introducing human risk.
As more traditional finance players enter the ecosystem, this model bridges the comfort of legacy auditability with the transparency of Web3.
The Security Philosophy: Assume Failure, Design for Resilience
CoinsDo’s record speaks for itself: zero incidents since launch.
The reason? Multi-layer verification, isolated environments, and zero standing privileges — meaning no one, not even CoinsDo, can move a client’s funds.
No single point of control exists. That’s how we’ve stayed incident-free.
Daniel Tan
This model aligns with traditional financial systems, offering segregation of duties, auditability, and strict access control — only with cryptographic ownership preserved.
Solving Real Enterprise Problems
Across fintech, payments, and gaming, businesses use CoinsDo to automate secure deposits, withdrawals, and treasury management.
By minimizing manual operations, companies reduce compliance risk while scaling confidently in digital assets.
Competing on Philosophy, Not Fees
In a crowded WaaS market with players like Fireblocks and Copper, CoinsDo stands apart for one reason: it’s fully non-custodial.
We never hold client keys or assets. Our focus is infrastructure, not custody.
Daniel Tan
CoinsDo’s transparent pricing model removes complexity — no fees based on AUM, address generation, or setup — making it accessible to startups and global institutions alike.
The Road Ahead: Real-World Adoption and Inclusion
With accelerating adoption from fintech and gaming, Daniel predicts the next growth wave will come from stablecoins and RWA tokenization.
Behind that evolution is a mission of ethical, inclusive participation — giving businesses of any size the ability to self-custody safely.
By 2035, managing digital assets will be as easy and secure as online banking. CoinsDo aims to be the invisible infrastructure powering that future.
Daniel Tan
Read the full interview here

