The Good Tech Companies - How Mixin Built a $1 Trillion Volume Crypto Wallet That Prioritizes Privacy Over Profit
Episode Date: January 26, 2026This story was originally published on HackerNoon at: https://hackernoon.com/how-mixin-built-a-$1-trillion-volume-crypto-wallet-that-prioritizes-privacy-over-profit. Son...ny Liu, CMO of Mixin, reveals how the company has processed over $1 trillion in volume while building privacy and encrypted communication into its crypto wal Check more stories related to web3 at: https://hackernoon.com/c/web3. You can also check exclusive content about #web3, #blockchain, #cryptocurrency, #mixin-news, #mixin-announcement, #defi, #crypto-wallet, #good-company, and more. This story was written by: @ishanpandey. Learn more about this writer by checking @ishanpandey's about page, and for more stories, please visit hackernoon.com. Mixin is a private crypto wallet and messenger. The company has processed over $1 trillion in volume while building privacy and encrypted communication into its crypto wallet from day one. Learn why Mixin chose Signal Protocol encryption and self-custody over monetization.
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This audio is presented by Hacker Noon, where anyone can learn anything about any technology.
How Mixon built a $1 trillion volume crypto wallet that prioritizes privacy over profit by Ashan Pondi.
Crypto wallets often force users to choose between security, privacy, and usability.
Since 2017, Mixon Messenger has been quietly building a different paradigm.
With over $1 billion in assets under management and support for 2,900 plus assets across 42
blockchains, the platform represents a contrarian bet that users shouldn't have to sacrifice
self-custody for a web two-like experience. Today, we sit down with Sunny Lou, CMO at Mixon,
to understand how they are rethinking the relationship between social communication,
asset privacy, and blockchain infrastructure. Ashan Pondi, hi Sunny, thank you for joining our
Behind the Startup series. Please tell us about yourself and what drew you to Mixin's mission
of integrating privacy first communication with multi-chain asset management. Sunny Lou. Hi everyone,
I'm Sunny from Mixin, currently responsible for product marketing. Mixin is a very forward-looking
company. From the very beginning, the team has treated privacy, security, and usability as core
product principles, not features you add later, but the foundation of everything we build.
In 2017, we launched our first product, Mixon, a private crypto wallet and messenger. At that time,
most wallets like Metamask, Electrum, and Trust Wallet were primarily built for asset management.
They had relatively high learning curves, were better suited for users with existing blockchain
knowledge, and were not very friendly to newcomers. Most of them were also designed mainly for
web use. We often referred to that period as the Wallet 1. Zero Era. It wasn't until around
2025 that wallets like OkX Wallet and Phantom began integrating social features, which we describe as
the wallet 3. Zero era. However, Mixon had already combined social communication with asset management
back in 2017, with privacy and ease of use as first principles. That's why we believe
Mixon was ahead of its time. As for why we deeply integrate privacy first communication with
multi-chain asset management, that's a great question. Even outside of crypto, people generally
do not want their assets or related communications to be exposed, whether it's financial
information or personal messages. While transparency is a core feature of blockchains, as crypto increasingly
takes on real asset value, the demand for privacy becomes much more urgent. The Mixon team recognized
this clearly as early as 2017. Only by combining communication privacy and asset privacy can users
truly protect themselves from unwanted exposure. Looking at 2026 and the strong performance of
privacy coins like ZEC and XMR, it's clear that privacy and security are becoming fundamental
Metsalusier needs, not nice to haves. Ashon Pondi. Mixon was founded in 2017 around a problem that
remains unsolved today, giving ordinary users a safe, intuitive way to manage crypto assets
without sacrificing privacy or self-custody. How has the market's understanding of this
problem evolved since you started, and where do you see the biggest gaps today? Sunny Lou.
I touched on this earlier, but let me expand. You can essentially trace market demand by
watching how decentralized wallets evolved. Wallet 1.0 was purely about custody, holding your assets.
Wallet 2.0 improved usability and basic transfers. Wallet 3.0 added trading, market data,
or social layers on top. If you ask me what the biggest gap is today, I'd say privacy without
hesitation. Almost no wallets treat privacy as a foundational design principle. Most treat it as an optional
add-on or premium feature. Mixon was built with privacy.
at the protocol level inside a decentralized network. That's the missing piece in the wider ecosystem.
What we're seeing now is the market slowly catching up to what we understood in 2017.
Users need privacy not because they have something to hide, but because financial security
and communication security are inseparable in the digital age. Ashon Pondi, most crypto wallets
add privacy features as optional layers, and NO Web 3 firm provides a built-in-encrypted messenger.
But Mixon built privacy into the system architecture from day one. Can you explain the technical
and philosophical reasoning behind this approach? What trade-offs did you have to navigate
to maintain both privacy and usability? Sunny Lou, we believe privacy is not just about financial
data? Communication privacy matters just as much. In recent years, many users have accidentally
leaked information that exposed their assets or personal context and suffered significant losses
as a result. We live in an era of information overload, where small data leaks can quickly become
public and exploited. Privacy shouldn't be a premium feature. It should be a default setting, something that
protects users automatically, not something they need to opt into or configure. Mixon uses end-to-end
encryption based on the signal protocol, so no third party, not even as, can access messages.
And users can transfer assets with zero fees between each other, making communication and asset usage feel
seamless. Here's the important part. We didn't have to compromise between usability and privacy
because the entire system was designed around both from day one. That's fundamentally different
from bolting privacy onto an existing architecture. When privacy is foundational, you don't sacrifice
user experience. You enhance it by eliminating the friction and fear that comes with exposure.
Ashan Pondi, you've processed over $1 trillion in total transaction volume and manage over $1 billion in
assets under management. Yet unlike most platforms at this scale, Mixon doesn't monetize through
custody or speculation. How does your diversified revenue model spanning trading, wealth services,
and membership reflect your long-term philosophy? Sunny Lou. Mixon was built to become a super app,
one that gives users access to the safest and most intuitive experience at the lowest possible cost.
We generate revenue through trading, wealth services, and membership programs. Boutur philosophy is to pass as
much economic benefit as possible back to users. For example, in version 3-5-0 we introduced a 60%
trading rebate program, meaning users get most of the trading fees back. And in version 3-6-0,
we launched free internal transfers across imported Web3 wallets. Users can import any Web3 wallet into
Mixin and transfer assets between them without fees. This creates deep product lock-in, but not through
extraction, through value. Users stay because we make their lives easier and cheaper, not because
we're trapping them or profiting from their assets under custody. That's the foundation of long-term
sustainability. Ashon Pondi Mixon integrates signal protocol based end-to-end encryption for all communications.
In most crypto products, messaging is either absent or an afterthought. Why did you make
encrypted social communication a core component rather than treating it as a separate feature?
Sunny Lou. We reached this conclusion by studying actual user behavior. After transferring funds,
people almost always switch to a messenger to coordinate or confirm details. It's a very natural flow,
send money, then message to say, sent, or received. But in crypto, communication leaks can reveal
sensitive details about wallet addresses, transaction amounts, or even personal security practices.
Switching across apps increases exposure and risk every single time. Combining encrypted communication
with a wallet creates a much safer and moranautural workflow. Users don't have to think about
security, they just communicate and transact in one protected environment. That's the kind of
simplicity that drives real adoption. Ashon Pondi. Finally, what advice would you give to founders
building infrastructure-focused crypto products in an industry that often rewards short-term
narratives over long-term technical reliability, Sunny Lou. Infrastructure isn't built for headlines or
market cycles. It's built for longevity. Trends change quickly in crypto, but fundamentals don't.
Over the past eight years, Mixon has adhered to three principles, privacy, security, and simplicity.
In 2017, these principles weren't popular and often conflicted with hype-driven growth strategies.
But they are the reason infrastructure survives across market cycles. Let me be direct about what
this means. Privacy should be the default, not an add-on. If you're asking users to opt into privacy,
you've already failed them. Security should be proven through design and time, not slogans.
Anyone can claim to be secure. Proving it requires years of operation without compromise.
Simplicity matters because real adoption only happens when complex systems feel effortless to
normal people. If your product requires a tutorial, you haven't finished building it.
Short-term narratives attract attention, but long-term trust is earned through consistency.
If you're building infrastructure, your real audience isn't today's sentiment or this quarter's metrics.
It's the users who will still rely on your system five or ten years from now.
At Mixon, that's how we've been building for eight straight years.
We believe it's the only sustainable path for this industry.
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