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This week, it emerged that a rogue developer published what they said was a Chrome extension version of Ledger Live on the Chrome store.
#LEDGER LIVE ON CHROMEBOOK ANDROID#
To do this, the user connects the hardware wallet device to the app, which is available on Android and iOS, and also as desktop software. Instead, it accesses it from the hardware wallet when the owner wants to manage their crypto assets. The app doesn’t contain a user’s private key. Both of them connect to an app called Ledger Live that lets users check balances and send and receive coins and tokens. There are two available: the Nano S and the Nano X. Launched in 2014, Ledger claims to have sold over 1.5m hardware wallets. A hardware wallet is a device dedicated to storing the addresses, and they are built to be as difficult to hack as possible. Some people write those addresses down on a piece of paper, while others might store them in a file on their computer or in a software application that doubles as a wallet. Instead of cash, however, crypto wallets hold digital keys – which grant users access to the blockchain addresses to unlock their funds. Cryptocurrency security company Ledger has warned users about a rogue Chrome extension that dupes its victims into giving up the keys to their crypto wallets.Ĭryptocurrency owners need a wallet just like users of regular cash do.