Yes, but as the risk of lost keys is definitely the highest risk, you want to have a process for this that you exercise. Not something that after 20 years you find out doesn't work (or got flooded, lost in a fire, stolen, otherwise destroyed) and it was your last copy on a piece of paper... I'm saying this from first hand experience. Rolling over (or at least rolling forward) is a good practice and if you do it on your hot wallet you'll be more comfortable and have less immediate risk.
I'd say the risk of, without any other error, someone attacking your key through magic quantum computers in a cluster the size of Jupiter is a lot smaller than you losing your keys. The chance that your wallet implementation is bad, is much larger. The chance that your metal seed vault thing gets stolen, is larger.
And the impact, on a personal level, for all these is exactly the same: you lost your coin.
Yes, but as the risk of lost keys is definitely the highest risk, you want to have a process for this that you exercise. Not something that after 20 years you find out doesn't work (or got flooded, lost in a fire, stolen, otherwise destroyed) and it was your last copy on a piece of paper... I'm saying this from first hand experience. Rolling over (or at least rolling forward) is a good practice and if you do it on your hot wallet you'll be more comfortable and have less immediate risk.
I'd say the risk of, without any other error, someone attacking your key through magic quantum computers in a cluster the size of Jupiter is a lot smaller than you losing your keys. The chance that your wallet implementation is bad, is much larger. The chance that your metal seed vault thing gets stolen, is larger.
And the impact, on a personal level, for all these is exactly the same: you lost your coin.