Fireblocks just shipped a product that sounds boring but matters a lot. The digital asset infrastructure firm launched its Security Center on June 17, a centralized dashboard that consolidates transaction policies, user access controls, blocked transactions, pending approvals, audit logs, and token exposure into a single pane of glass.
What the Security Center actually does
Transaction policies, user and API access, blocked transactions, pending approvals, audit logs, and user management all feed into a single view. Security teams can see who’s doing what, what’s been flagged, and what’s still waiting for sign-off, all without switching between tools.
Fireblocks also introduced two new specialized roles alongside the dashboard. The first is Security Auditor, a read-only role designed for compliance teams that need to monitor without touching anything. The second is Security Admin, which carries more operational muscle, including user management capabilities and IP allowlisting, but deliberately excludes control over actual transactions.
One notable caveat: the Security Center is not available to customers on the Essentials package. Most Fireblocks clients will have access, but the entry-level tier is left out for now.
Building on the security stack
This launch doesn’t exist in a vacuum. Fireblocks rolled out its Security Posture Management tool, known as FSPM, back in October 2025. That product focused on proactive security, using AI-driven scanning to identify vulnerabilities and provide remediation guidance before problems escalated.
The Security Center operates differently. Where FSPM is about finding and fixing, the new dashboard is about continuous visibility.
Fireblocks has built a substantial client base to pitch these tools to. The platform has secured trillions of dollars in digital asset transactions across more than 150 blockchains, serving thousands of organizations. The roster includes Worldpay, BNY Mellon, Galaxy, and Revolut among them.
What this means for investors
The introduction of dedicated security roles is particularly telling. Compliance teams at major financial institutions have specific requirements around access controls, audit trails, and separation of duties. A read-only auditor role and a limited-privilege admin role are exactly the kind of features that procurement teams at large banks put on their vendor evaluation checklists.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

1 hour ago
18









English (US) ·