JIL vs Ledger Enterprise is a key concept in institutional digital asset infrastructure. Ledger Enterprise uses hardware-based key storage. JIL combines MPC software key sharding with post-quantum algorithms and on-chain compliance, without requiring physical hardware at the user level.
Institutional decision-makers evaluate multiple platforms before selecting settlement and custody infrastructure. Understanding how platforms compare across security, compliance, performance, and cost is essential for informed technology selection.
Ledger Enterprise uses hardware-based key storage. JIL combines MPC software key sharding with post-quantum algorithms and on-chain compliance, without requiring physical hardware at the user level. JIL's key differentiators include true self-custody with MPC 2-of-3 (user holds a shard), $250K automatic protection coverage, post-quantum cryptography in production, 48 patent claims, and deterministic sub-2-second finality across 13 jurisdictions.
Ledger Enterprise uses hardware-based key storage. JIL combines MPC software key sharding with post-quantum algorithms and on-chain compliance, without requiring physical hardware at the user level.
Institutional decision-makers evaluate multiple platforms before selecting settlement and custody infrastructure. Understanding how platforms compare across security, compliance, performance, and cost is essential for informed technology selection.