> Nothing could stop you from opening a business that would offer insurance in case of key theft.
I don't think insurance models work for this. How can the insurance company verify that the key wasn't stupid simple? It seems very hard to determine prices and premiums if can't assess the 'risk' - knowing that all 'risk' comes from the potential of user-error and nothing else
Also, there's the issue that in our financial system its very difficult for the common person to transfer all of their money to another account they own and call it theft. If I'm not mistaken that is a possibility with every single cryptocurrency, right?
I would expect that to get a reasonable premium, you would have to agree to follow certain best practices that would reduce the risk profile. Implementation would of course be hard.
You could be forced to use something like coinbase where they store your private keys. Actually coinbase already provides some kind of insurance in case they get hacked.
I don't think insurance models work for this. How can the insurance company verify that the key wasn't stupid simple? It seems very hard to determine prices and premiums if can't assess the 'risk' - knowing that all 'risk' comes from the potential of user-error and nothing else
Also, there's the issue that in our financial system its very difficult for the common person to transfer all of their money to another account they own and call it theft. If I'm not mistaken that is a possibility with every single cryptocurrency, right?