Summary: Station70 is a crypto-security company focused on institutions that manage digital assets and want stronger operational resilience around self-custody, authentication, and agent access. Its current public product surface spans Bunker for wallet backup and disaster recovery, Castle for MPC-based enterprise authentication, and Gatekeeper for enclave-executed agent credential use, so it is better cataloged as a broader institutional security backbone than as a single-purpose backup vendor.
What it does:
Sells Bunker, an institutional disaster-recovery and business-continuity product for digital-asset operations
Claims zero-knowledge wallet-account migration and failover workflows through Secure Wallet Account Transfer (SWAT) and related recovery architecture
Publishes verifiable-backup and integrity-check language tied to device check-ins, proof-of-backup infrastructure, and third-party attestations
Uses AWS Nitro enclaves, HSM-backed infrastructure, and MPC-style threshold controls across products according to the company’s own materials
Sells Castle, an enterprise identity product for hardened authentication and shared-account / 2FA-key protection with Okta and Azure AD integration claims
Sells Gatekeeper, an enclave-executed credential-control product for AI agents that gives agents scoped tokens instead of direct access to raw secrets
Key claims:
The Bunker page says Station70 is building an institutional disaster-recovery solution with zero-knowledge private-key migration, verifiable backup reports, and configurable cryptographic quorums
The Castle page says the company uses battle-tested MPC plus secure mobile enclaves to improve enterprise authentication beyond standard MFA, including threshold approvals and compatibility with Okta and Azure AD
The Gatekeeper page says secrets are encrypted client-side, actions execute inside AWS Nitro enclaves, and agents receive scoped, time-limited tokens rather than raw credentials
Station70’s team page is useful primary-source context because it ties the company to former BlockFi, Bakkt, Coinbase, JPMorgan, and Cross River operators, which helps explain why the product focus is strongly institutional
The launch post for Bunker says the company raised a $5 million seed round and frames the business around self-custody recovery, failover wallet architecture, and recovery-response services rather than general wallet software
The SOC 2 Type 2 blog post is notable because it claims the audit scope covers Nitro enclave operations, quorum enforcement mechanisms, and attestation reporting, which are unusually specific operational-control claims for a crypto-security vendor
The Cyvers partnership post shows Station70 extending beyond backup into transaction-signing security and co-signer services for institutional wallet users
Whitepaper: No canonical Station70 whitepaper or litepaper surfaced in this pass. The clearest current source of truth is the official product pages for Bunker, Castle, and Gatekeeper, plus the company blog and team page; see ../whitepapers/station70-primary-sources-2026-04-27.md.