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>do you think a trezor could have a hardware hack by a professional in say 10 years?
The firmware is open source, and has already been researched in-depth. The only current known exploit is the Kraken exploit, which is a real vulnerability. It’s just finding out if anyone is actually interested in making this exploit easy to use. Most hackers won’t be interested, because it requires physical access to the device so its scope is limited to whatever devices that they can somehow physically steal. You can’t do that across the globe quickly like you can with phishing methods.
This vunerability might be looked into by companies that do crypto recovery… but still, it would be a small audience for them. It would have to be someone with a Trezor of the current hardware version (not a future newer Trezor), which is still functional, which hasn’t been wiped, that is protecting a significant amount of funds, that the person is willing to ship it to them, and that the seed phrase hasn’t been stolen by a hacker. So, a lot of work for these companies for what could be a small target.
So….. to answer your question: Maybe???
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>Besides killing yourself or getting over it
Don’t kill yourself, don’t even joke about it. It’s just money.