~
Is it this product?
https://www.ballet.com/en/whatisballet/If so, this is not even a hardware wallet in the first place! It only holds a single private key, which you can only view by peeling off the sticker.
You can easily (and much more securely) make this yourself. It's highly insecure to just use a private key that someone generated for you, as they can easily have a copy of it and sweep it immediately after funding, or later down the road.
Anyhow, for backing this thing up, you'd want to back up the private key here (which you
could engrave into metal), but then the sticker is peeled and I'm not sure that you can stick it back on.
Damn, this is so misleading. They mention BIP38, which is just private key encryption. Meanwhile you want
BIP39, which gives you a wallet that deterministically creates keys from a seed phrase. I'm sure that's why they put
BIP38 in the advertisement, as otherwise it's not really a
feature to brag about.
[1] Sure, their wallet requires no set-up. Because they did it in advance -
making it wholly insecure in the process![2] What's the use of a durable wallet when it's
totally insecure? Also, you can easily
back up real hardware wallets on steel washers or plates.
[3] What's the use of a wallet that doesn't require firmware updates, when it's
totally insecure? Also, you don't
need to install those updates, and if you really fuck up flashing, you still have your
steel backup anyway.
[4] Wrong on so many fronts:
[4.1] What's the use of a wallet that is not hackable through USB if it's
totally insecure?
[4.2] This is just a metal plate with a private key printed on it. To spend any funds, it absolutely needs to be imported into a software wallet, making it
susceptible to all the attack vectors of a software wallet. Except if you're skilled to use an airgapped computer with Tails; but then you don't need this product in the first place.
[4.3]
Airgapped hardware wallets don't need to be connected to a computer.
Lastly, you can do this for free, in a secure way, e.g. using Tails:
https://tails.boum.org/It is called a
paper wallet.