> From a technical standpoint, how difficult it is to hack your own company?
It would be easy. If you're the founder might have special access to the keys, in fact you probably need to for emergency purposes. Whether that's a "hack" I don't know, it seems to just be theft.
The real question is what do you do with the fact that you have the keys? If you are tempted to nick all the money, you might end up in a bad place.
If you use non-privacy chains, which are the common ones, you can get found out as soon as you try to do anything meaningful with it. Eg you move to some country, you want to buy a place, you find a seller willing to take crypto, ding-ding-ding, authorities will ask them where they got the coins from and there you are in your pool.
It would be easy. If you're the founder might have special access to the keys, in fact you probably need to for emergency purposes. Whether that's a "hack" I don't know, it seems to just be theft.
The real question is what do you do with the fact that you have the keys? If you are tempted to nick all the money, you might end up in a bad place.