Cointime

Download App
iOS & Android

The Digital Asset Anti-Money Laundering Act is an opportunistic, unconstitutional assault on cryptocurrency self custody, developers, and node operators

The bipartisan Digital Asset Anti-Money Laundering Act, introduced today by Sens. Warren and Marshall, is the most direct attack on the personal freedom and privacy of cryptocurrency users and developers we’ve yet seen. It would force anyone who helps maintain public blockchain infrastructure, either through software development or validating transactions on the network, to register as a Financial Institution (FI). As FIs, they would be obligated to:

  • identify and record the personal information of every person who uses their software or sends transactions over their internet-connected computers,
  • develop risk-calibrated AML programs that block persons from using their software or network throughput if they suspect those people are moving funds related to crime, and
  • file reports about their users without a warrant, government request, or probable cause as the trigger.

Additionally, every FI, including traditional FIs like banks, custodial crypto FIs, and these newly classified crypto infrastructure FIs, would be banned from making any transactions involving privacy tools (e.g. Tornado Cash or similar privacy software) or privacy preserving cryptocurrencies (e.g. ZcashMonero, etc.), irrespective of any evidence of criminality related to those transactions.

We do not believe this bill is mistakenly drafted.

In the past we’ve been outspoken critics of legislation that unknowingly or unwittingly sweeps non-custodial infrastructure providers and software developers into the ambit of financial services surveillance and regulation (for example state money transmission licensing legislation or the early drafts of New York’s BitLicense). In this case, the legislation is clear on its face: the drafters intend to impose permissioning regulation upon software developers and node operators, as well as a long list of similar noncustodial entities. In other words, the bill has been deliberately crafted to make permissionless blockchains unavailable to Americans by forcing all validators and developers of these networks to gate and surveil their infrastructure. The intended result is to forbid Americans from having any technological guarantees of personal privacy or individual agency when making transactions online, irrespective of whether those transactions have anything to do with crime. To the extent cryptocurrencies could even continue to exist in a world where this bill becomes law, Americans’ ability to use them would be limited to a fully permissioned and surveilled environment.

This bill is focused exclusively on financial surveillance and does not address any of the issues of corporate control that led to the collapse of FTX. For years, Coin Center has been advocating for a federal regulatory framework for custodial cryptocurrency exchanges and we remain committed to working towards passage of such legislation. Perversely, however, this bill would effectively outlaw the very form of self-custody of digital assets that prevents the kind of counterparty risk to consumers exemplified in the FTX collapse. The bill will endanger rather than protect consumers who are interested in owning or using cryptocurrencies by forbidding them from having agency and control over their own assets.

If passed, the bill would face harsh constitutional scrutiny from the courts. Facially, it appears to call for significant and likely unconstitutional prior restraints on protected expression. It forces the developers of “unhosted wallet” software to register before publishing code and it forces network nodes to register before relaying blockchain-related information. Similarly, it appears to unconstitutionally compel speech based on content. It forces all of these speakers to only publish content that conforms to the strictures of the Bank Secrecy Act. It forces these speakers to hobble the privacy and security of their own software and data with backdoors, much in the way the FBI attempted to force Apple to hobble their own iOS security by compelling them to publish backdoored software. Further, it would make it impossible for users of these networks to make anonymous payments, including donations to political organizations and potentially other payments or messages that are essential to effective political assembly and therefore also protected under the First Amendment. The legislation may also be unconstitutional under the Fourth Amendment, as it deputizes software developers and miners to collect and report private information, without a warrant, about cryptocurrency users even though that information is not voluntarily disclosed by those users or in any way relevant to the business purpose of the developer or miner.

As we’ve written time and time again, a defining characteristic that separates America from illiberal regimes like North Korea, China, and Russia is our reverence for individual autonomy, privacy, and dignity. Physical cash is a technological bulwark of those rights and privileges in open societies because it preserves and enables the capability of transacting directly, citizen to citizen, without the need for approval from some corporation or state bureaucracy. Electronic transactions without cryptocurrency technologies do not promote those rights, rather they force citizens to rely on a class of centralized gatekeepers who can freely approve or censor every transaction and who can amass and abuse a comprehensive dossier of every citizen’s intimate activities. Only cryptocurrencies create systems of electronic cash through which the individual is once again empowered to make transactions directly and privately, even online.

The Digital Asset Anti-Money Laundering Act is a direct attack on technological progress and also a direct attack on our personal privacy and autonomy. Make no mistake, while proposed as a solution to potential money laundering and terrorist financing, the bill is in fact a repudiation of liberal values and a move towards the types of surveillance and control prized by authoritarians like Vladimir Putin, Xi Jinping, and Kim Jong-un. Unfortunately, the bill cannot be improved; it can only be opposed in its entirety. Coin Center will do everything in its power to protect the rights of Americans and defeat this unwarranted attack on individual privacy and autonomy.

Comments

All Comments

Recommended for you

  • Spot Gold Declines by 2%

    On May 27, spot gold saw its intraday decline widen to 2%, trading at $4,416.32 per ounce.

  • Analysis: Bitcoin May Continue 'May Sell-off', Historical Signals Indicate About 10% Short-term Correction Risk

    Bitcoin has been weakening for a month, retreating after being blocked near $83,000, and is currently moving towards a decline in May, which the market views as a classic seasonal signal of 'May sell-off' re-emerging. Historical data shows that Bitcoin's average return one month after a 'red May' is approximately -10%, and about -3.3% over three months, with short-term trends typically continuing to weaken; based on historical averages, the price could fall to around the $68,200 range. Analysis indicates that 'red May' in a bear market structure is often more destructive; however, Bitcoin's average increase over the six months following 'red May' can reach about +139%, and even after excluding anomalous years, it remains around +12.9%, indicating that the long-term trend has not been disrupted by seasonal signals.

  • U.S. Stocks Open Higher with All Three Major Indices Up

    U.S. stocks opened higher, with all three major indices rising: the Dow Jones increased by 0.18%, the S&P 500 rose by 0.07%, and the Nasdaq gained 0.17%. Micron Technology (MU.O) surged by 6.6% after UBS significantly raised its target price to $162.50.

  • BTC Falls Below $75,000

    Market data shows that BTC has fallen below $75,000, currently priced at $74,968.47, with a 24-hour decline of 2.42%. The market is experiencing significant volatility, so please ensure proper risk management.

  • UCarpay CARDPIE: Connecting Digital Assets with Global Cross border Payment Channels

    As global demand for digital asset circulation and cross-border payments continues to grow, users are increasingly facing challenges such as limited access to traditional payment channels, high foreign exchange costs, and fragmented card management. In response to these market needs, CARDPIE, a professional USDT card aggregation platform, is building a seamless bridge between digital assets and global spending by delivering a comprehensive stablecoin payment solution for both individuals and enterprises.

  • Astarter releases multi chain expansion roadmap signal plan to extend to EVM and Solana ecosystems

    The Cardano ecological infrastructure project Astarter has released a multi chain expansion roadmap signal in public materials, gradually extending its clearing layer infrastructure to mainstream public chain ecosystems such as EVM and Solana. The Astarter team believes that the Al Agent economy and DePIN network essentially run across chains, and the execution layer that only anchors a single public chain is structurally limited. Multi chain expansion is a crucial step for Astarter to reach all AI agent economic activities. The specific deployment goals and timeline for the second public chain will be announced in subsequent announcements. Cardano will still be retained as the basic anchor chain.

  • US Spot Ethereum ETF Sees Net Outflow of $35.1 Million Yesterday

    On May 27, according to monitoring data from Farside Investors, the US spot Ethereum ETF experienced a net outflow of $35.1 million yesterday.

  • US Spot Bitcoin ETF Sees Net Outflow of $333.61 Million Yesterday

    On May 27, according to monitoring by Trader T, the US spot Bitcoin ETF experienced a net outflow of $333.61 million yesterday.

  • Supreme Court's Liu Guixiang: In-depth Study of Judging Rules for New Cases like Virtual Currency and Cross-Border Finance

    On May 27, Liu Guixiang, a deputy-level full-time member of the Supreme People's Court Judicial Committee and a second-level justice, stated at a press conference held by the State Council Information Office that the people's courts will legally support compliant and lawful financial innovation models, combat financial illegal activities, and conduct in-depth research on the judging rules for new cases such as virtual currency and cross-border finance.

  • Micron Technology Soars 12%, Market Value Reaches $950 Billion

    On May 26, Micron Technology's stock price rose by 12.09%, reaching $841.76 per share, with a total market value of $950 billion, setting a new historical high.