Financial privacy and anonymity online have been among the key principles of blockchains since Satoshi Nakamoto first unveiled the Bitcoin white paper, but recent actions from regulators have put this principle under pressure.
To better understand regulatory actions, listening to what regulators are actually saying can be useful.
For instance, Christy Goldsmith Romero, a commissioner at the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), was cited in a Reuters article from earlier this year as calling fraud “a hallmark of the digital asset markets,” adding that the human toll of this “may be overlooked.”
"It's essential for governments and particularly the industry to address that which makes crypto so attractive to illicit finance, and that is the allure of anonymity," she said.
The same comments were also brought up in a Cointelegraph report from this week written by Vinay Tripathi, a director of product at identity verification provider Trulioo. The report focused on how crypto trading and custody platforms are complying with know-your-customer (KYC) regulations that are imposed by governments.
According to the report, comprehensive compliance systems are needed for companies such as crypto exchanges for them to handle the complexities of differing regulations and ID verification procedures around the world.
To better handle this, specialized platforms offered by identity verification providers have gained a foothold in the crypto industry, the report said, while explaining that these often make used of automation and artificial intelligence (AI)-driven technology.
All in all, it’s clear that the crypto industry has delivered many benefits, including the promise of decentralized finance (DeFi) to be an open financial system
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