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More ETH tokens, CSV export, and Brave support land in SSP

·4 min read·By SSP Editorial Team
RELEASE badge with coins, wallet, zap, and shield-check icons above the headline ETH Tokens + CSV + Brave — more tokens, transaction history, browser

On 2024-11-19, SSP Wallet v1.8.0 lands a quartet of releases at once: native support for roughly 100 Ethereum tokens, custom ERC-20 imports on Ethereum and Sepolia, transaction history export to CSV, and full support for the Brave browser. Together they widen what you can hold inside SSP, what you can take out of it for taxes and accounting, and where you can run it.

TL;DR

  • Around 100 Ethereum tokens are now natively supported — balances, logos, and decimals come in automatically.
  • Custom ERC-20 imports on Ethereum and Sepolia let you add any contract you can verify.
  • Transaction history exports to CSV for taxes, accounting, and audit trails.
  • Brave browser is now a first-class home for the SSP extension.
  • Filipino and Russian languages are added in this release — a broader multilingual story is coming soon.

~100 Ethereum tokens supported natively

When v1.6.0 brought Ethereum + Schnorr ERC-4337 multisig to SSP, ETH itself was the headline and ERC-20 support was the obvious next step. v1.8.0 is that step, at scale. SSP now ships with around 100 Ethereum tokens recognised out of the box, no setup required.

"Natively supported" is a precise claim. It means the wallet already knows the token's contract address, official name, ticker, decimals, and logo. When a balance lands in your SSP account, it is auto-detected and displayed correctly: the right amount, the right symbol, the right artwork. You don't paste a contract, you don't tell SSP how many decimals the token uses, and you don't end up with a UI that calls it "Unknown Token". For the long tail of mainstream ERC-20s — stablecoins, governance tokens, popular DeFi assets — this turns Ethereum from "ETH plus a setup chore" into something that just works the moment funds arrive.

Custom token imports

The flip side of a curated list is that no list covers everything. v1.8.0 also adds custom token import on the EVM chains that SSP currently exposes: Ethereum mainnet and the Sepolia testnet. You paste a contract address, SSP fetches the on-chain metadata, and the token shows up in your account alongside the natively supported ones.

One word of caution worth saying out loud: import contracts you've verified, not contracts you've been sent. The safe path is to check the address on a block explorer like Etherscan and against the project's own repository or official site before you import. A contract that displays as "USDC" in SSP because someone deployed it with that name and ticker is not USDC; the address is what matters. Treat custom imports the way you'd treat any address you paste into a send screen — sourced from somewhere you trust, not from a tweet or a DM.

Transaction history to CSV

The other quietly useful thing in v1.8.0 is an export button. SSP can now write your transaction history out to CSV, which is the lingua franca of every spreadsheet, every accounting tool, and every tax package most people use at year end. Open it in your tool of choice, filter by date, sort by asset, drop it into the workflow you already have.

For accountants, auditors, and anyone keeping a paper trail for compliance, this is the difference between copying activity by hand and just attaching a file. It is a small surface and a large quality-of-life improvement.

Brave browser support

SSP has lived in Chromium-based extension stores since launch, and Brave is Chromium under the hood. v1.8.0 makes that relationship official: Brave is a fully supported home for the SSP extension. Install it from the same extension flow you'd use in Chrome and it behaves the same way.

Brave's defaults lean toward blocking trackers, isolating sites, and minimising fingerprinting — a posture that pairs naturally with SSP's self-custody story. If you already use Brave because you'd rather not be the product, running a 2-of-2 multisig wallet inside it is a coherent choice. Nothing about the wallet changes; the surface it runs on just got friendlier.

A note on languages

v1.8.0 also adds Filipino and Russian as supported interface languages. They are part of a bigger multilingual rollout that deserves its own piece, and we'll have more on that story soon.

Source: SSP Wallet v1.8.0 release notes.

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