

This gold key (accompanied by a gold ingot with the account number) allows access to a safe deposit box in a Zurich bank. In Lewis Perdue's Daughter of God there is a gold key which is hidden in a painting ("The Home of the Lady of Our Redeemer").
GOLDEN TICKEY CODE
The gold key bears the logo of the Priory of Sion, a secret society, which leads Neveu and co-hero Robert Langdon to guess the code associated with the key. In the best-selling novel The Da Vinci Code, the heroine Sophie Neveu is given a gold key by her grandfather. It is a common literary device that banks do not admit publicly that "gold key" accounts actually exist, and characters are therefore invested into a sort of secret society when they are offered such an account. A number of plot devices detail the method of authentication of the account-holder, adding to the mystery and drama of the client's arrival. The arrival of a "gold key client" typically results in an extra flurry of attention. Other countries still offer offshore bank accounts with varying degrees of anonymity in transactions.

International pressure related to efforts to trace and identify terrorists and drug traffickers has eliminated the anonymous "Swiss bank account" that has appeared in numerous books and films and conspiracy theories.

Swiss banks are now required by law to obtain identifying information from any prospective clients. While Swiss law formerly granted nearly complete financial privacy, fully anonymous accounts are no longer available. In the case of the GoldKey Security Token, a USB device developed by a team of developers, the token acts as a physical "key" to electronic data. If it is a key it may not fit any lock the keys are important as authentication tokens, not always as literal keys. Ī real "gold key" need not be made of or colored gold, or even a key. In reality, the key is often a code word and accounts are not completely anonymous. In fiction, a gold key is a special token granting access to and control of a mythical or ultra-private or secret bank account or vault, such as a Swiss bank account. (Serial numbers obscured in altered photo.) Use of a gold ingot as a "gold key" has been used as a plot device. For the comics imprint, see Gold Key Comics. For the keyboard key, see Gold key (DEC).
