Share this article

Crypto Needs to Be Private by Default, Some Consensus 2023 Guests Say

Participants at Consensus 2023 describe the tension between the need for privacy, transparency and regulation in crypto and DeFi in an excerpt from CoinDesk’s first-ever Consensus @ Consensus Report.

Updated Jun 9, 2023, 4:52 p.m. Published Jun 7, 2023, 1:01 p.m.
jwp-player-placeholder

Privacy and criminality share an uncomfortably intimate existence, not least of all in cryptocurrency.

Many consider the power to selectively reveal or hide oneself to the world a human right, but it is often abused by criminals, leading to calls for increased government surveillance, which in turn encroaches on the privacy of law-abiding citizens who make up the vast majority of crypto users.

This article is excerpted from CoinDesk’s inaugural Consensus @ Consensus Report, the product of intimate, curated group discussions that took place at Consensus 2023. Click here to download the full report.

If crypto were to truly function as anonymous digital cash, as envisioned in Satoshi Nakamoto’s white paper introducing Bitcoin, it would become anathema to the financial surveillance regime that has prevailed globally since the U.S. hastily passed the Patriot Act after 9/11.

“There is a tension between the crypto ethos and existing policies,” noted one participant in a closed-door discussion at Consensus 2023.

See also: Privacy Isn't Just an Edge Case for Crypto | Opinion

Nevertheless, the lack of privacy by default on-chain may be the only thing that endears law enforcement and regulators in the U.S. and other jurisdictions to crypto.

Advertisement

For two hours, experts from a range of disciplines – technology, business, law and governments – gathered to offer insights into how new policies, new technologies and practical risk-based approaches may balance the competing demands of privacy and transparency…

Click here to download the full Consensus @ Consensus report.

More For You

BitSeek: Decentralized AI Infrastructure Revolutionizing the Web3 Industry

More For You

[u]New languages arrived and now we need to verify translations for Indonesian & Turkish

watch, interior

A longtime vocal critic of bitcoin, Dimon said the bank he runs will now let clients to buy the crypto.

What to know:

  • JPMorgan Chase will soon let clients buy bitcoin, though the bank won’t custody the asset, CEO Jamie Dimon said.
  • Dimon reiterated his skepticism toward crypto, calling himself “not a fan” of bitcoin due to its use in illicit activity.
  • Despite downplaying blockchain’s importance, JPMorgan's Kinexys platform recently tested tokenized U.S. Treasury settlement on a public blockchain.