Disclosure Today
  • Home
  • Business
  • Gaming
  • Crypto
Wednesday, March 22, 2023
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Business
  • Gaming
  • Crypto
No Result
View All Result
Disclosure Today
No Result
View All Result
Home Crypto

Making your voice heard ahead of Thursday’s critical EU vote

Coinbase by Coinbase
March 27, 2022
in Crypto
0
24
SHARES
800
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

By Paul Grewal, Chief Legal Officer

Bad facts make bad law. We see this in jurisdictions all over the world, especially when it comes to digital assets. Unfortunately, we are about to see this again — this time in the European Union — in the form of a revision to the Transfer of Funds Regulation. If adopted, this revision would unleash an entire surveillance regime on exchanges like Coinbase, stifle innovation, and undermine the self-hosted wallets that individuals use to securely protect their digital assets. The vote will likely take place this week so time is running out.

Here are the bad “facts”:

(1) digital assets like Bitcoin, Ethereum and others are a primary way criminals hide and move money

(2) law enforcement has no way to track these movements

(3) requiring collection and verification of personal information associated with self-hosted is not a violation of their privacy

State of play

The truth is that digital assets are in general a markedly inferior way for criminals to hide their illicit financial activity. That’s why, according to the best research available, by far the most popular way to hide illicit financial activity remains cash. Unlike with cash, law enforcement can track and trace digital asset transfers with advanced analytics tools. None of this requires upsetting the settled privacy expectations of wallet holders because the open architecture underlying digital assets is public and offers unprecedented transparency into transaction details. The records are also permanent — no one (not crypto companies, not governments, not even bad actors) can destroy or alter information. In short, digital assets and the immutable nature of their blockchain technology actually enhances the ability to detect and deter illicit activity. But rather than embracing and leveraging the benefits that arise from the increasing use of digital assets, the EU’s proposal would cast them aside and impose a host of new privacy invasions on wallet users.

For example, all crypto transactions will be deemed “travel rule eligible”. This means crypto is treated differently to fiat (which has a 1,000 EUR threshold), which establishes a clear advantage for traditional financial service providers over new technology, with significant anti-competition and anti-innovation implications.

Among the worst of the proposed provisions are new obligations on exchanges to collect, verify and report information on non-customers using self-hosted wallets. For instance, one provision requires exchanges to not only collect personal data about wallet users who are not their customers, but to also verify the data’s accuracy before allowing a transfer to one of their customers. In fiat terms, this would basically mean you cannot take money out of your bank account to send to someone else until you share personal data with your financial institution about that person and verify their identity. Not only is this verification requirement nearly impossible to do but requiring exchanges to engage in extensive data collection, verification, and retention about non-customers runs against core EU data protection principles of data minimization and proportionality.

Another dangerous provision would require exchanges to inform “competent authorities” of every single transfer from a non-customer’s self-hosted wallet equal to or greater than 1,000 EUR — regardless of any suspicion of bad activity. The proposal even leaves the door open to a total ban on transfers to self-hosted wallets even though there is no evidence that such a ban would have any impact on illicit activity at all. Like we said, bad facts make bad policy.

Make your voice heard

There’s precious time to act and we need to make our voices heard. A vote on Parliament’s draft proposal could come as early as Thursday, March 31st. If you care about protecting the privacy of individuals, and focusing the law on solutions that actually address legitimate concerns about the illicit use of digital assets, now is the time to speak up and be heard. We must speak with one, strong voice against this proposal before it’s too late.

Read More

Previous Post

What Bear Market? Zilliqa Rallies 116% on Agora Tie-Up

Next Post

CODA wins Best Picture at the Oscars 2022

Next Post

CODA wins Best Picture at the Oscars 2022

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Ukraine cyber attack ‘part of Russian playbook’, says top US diplomat

January 15, 2022

Don’t sweat the decline of marriage

September 23, 2022

Let’s hear it for the boys: why the real problem in schools is for males

May 2, 2022

Heritage rules block owners of historic UK homes from energy efficiency measures

December 30, 2022

Elden Ring resolution, frame rate, and more details revealed

November 8, 2021
Former Amazon and Fox exec announces new developer Astrid Entertainment

Former Amazon and Fox exec announces new developer Astrid Entertainment

November 15, 2022
Nexon revenues jump 28% year-over-year

Nexon revenues jump 28% year-over-year

November 11, 2022

Global fundraising in capital markets shrinks by $900bn in first quarter

April 1, 2022

New Genshin Impact character Shikanoin Heizou gets a surprise reveal ahead of delayed update 2.7

May 16, 2022

Inverse Finance (INV), Liquity (LQTY), Polyswarm (NCT) and Propy (PRO) are launching on Coinbase…

January 12, 2022

London mayor looks to cut car journeys in push for net zero

January 18, 2022

Is dedicated cloud gaming hardware self-defeating? | This Week in Business

October 15, 2022

Ukraine war latest: US official says Russian shelling has made humanitarian efforts ‘difficult’

March 15, 2022

After Celsius, Binance Temporarily Halts Bitcoin Withdrawals

June 13, 2022

Navigating early access: legal and practical considerations

August 7, 2022

Amiga 500 Mini’s full game list has been revealed

December 18, 2021
  • Home
  • Crypto

© 2021 Disclosure / Today.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Crypto

© 2021 Disclosure / Today.