[Portuguese] JIL Wallet and Trust Wallet both support multiple blockchain networks with self-custody, but use different security models for different audiences. Trust Wallet stores keys on the user's mobile device, serving retail crypto users with broad chain support. JIL Wallet uses MPC 2-of-3 threshold signing, serving institutional users who need compliance enforcement, protection coverage, and enterprise-grade key management.
[Portuguese] Mobile-stored keys are vulnerable to device loss, theft, malware, and SIM-swap attacks. For retail amounts this risk may be acceptable, but institutional-scale assets require stronger guarantees. MPC custody distributes key material so that no single device compromise can result in fund loss.
[Portuguese] JIL Wallet provides MPC-secured custody where the complete key never exists on any single device. It adds $250K automatic protection, 13-chain support with BIP-44 HD derivation, biometric Proof-of-Humanity, post-quantum cryptography, and built-in compliance enforcement - making it suitable for institutional-scale digital asset management.
JIL targets institutional users with MPC key splitting (no device stores the complete key), $250K protection, compliance tools, and post-quantum security. Trust Wallet is a retail mobile wallet with broad chain support but no institutional features.
Trust Wallet supports more chains (70+). JIL Wallet currently supports 13 major blockchains but provides institutional-grade security, compliance enforcement, and protection coverage that Trust Wallet does not offer.