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Crypto advocates file brief against SEC’s investor tracking database

The Consolidated Audit Trail would gather a monumental amount of data, and more than it is meant to when it exposes the identity of crypto wallet holders.

The DeFi Education Fund and the Blockchain Association jointly filed an amicus brief in a case brought by two individuals and the New Civil Liberties Alliance (NCLA) against the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), its chairman Gary Gensler and the Consolidated Audit Trail (CAT). The complaint does not mention cryptocurrency or blockchain, but the organizations argue that the CAT could have a profound negative effect on crypto users.

The CAT is a database that was first proposed in 2010 and became operational in April. According to its website, the CAT “tracks orders throughout their life cycle and identifies the broker-dealers handling them, thus allowing regulators to efficiently track activity in Eligible Securities throughout the U.S. markets.”

The NCLA complaint against the CAT database. Source: Pacer

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Tether has ‘redistributed’ $108.8M USDT from illicit activity since 2014

‘Garbled Circuits’ Enable Transactional Confidentiality, Encourage Enterprise Web3 Adoption — COTI Co-Founder

‘Garbled Circuits’ Enable Transactional Confidentiality, Encourage Enterprise Web3 Adoption — COTI Co-FounderAccording to Shahaf Bar-Geffen, CEO of the privacy-centric Layer 2 network COTI, enterprises and mainstream organizations are not yet fully convinced of the benefits of complete privacy or true anonymity in any system. Bar-Geffen said the primary reason for this is that such systems often get exploited by individuals with dishonest intentions. Regulators’ Perceptions of […]

Tether has ‘redistributed’ $108.8M USDT from illicit activity since 2014

Transparent financial systems won’t get real traction, blockchain exec argues

Anoma founder Adrian Brink pointed out that using a transparent system means that "your neighbor can see how much money you hold, what your daily preferences are.”

As the conversation around privacy intensified with the recent Litecoin (LTC) upgrade called Mimblewimble and regulators’ reaction to the feature, Adrian Brink, the founder of blockchain protocol Anoma, weighed in on the topic and shared his perspectives to Cointelegraph. 

According to Brink, privacy is an essential tool for democracy because it prevents huge corporations from targeting people and segregating them into different bubbles. The Anoma founder told Cointelegraph that:

“The fact that you have surveillance capitalism allows micro-targeting to such an extent that it can put people into their own filter bubbles which is what erodes democracy very quickly.” 

Brink believes that blockchain technology has a solution to this issue. He noted that the space is able to tackle issues within financial privacy and then eventually move on to solving general data privacy in the future. Brink said: 

“There is a serious attempt at solving digital privacy because there is a lot of resources being spent in innovating around zero-knowledge proofs and using ZKPs as a privacy-preserving technology.”

The Anoma founder also argued that privacy-focused projects can push crypto adoption into the mainstream. Brink pointed out that using a transparent system “fundamentally means that your neighbor can see how much money you hold, what your daily preferences are.” This is why Brink believes that transparent financial systems will not gain traction. 

Related: Binance ends support for anonymous Litecoin transactions

Earlier in June, many exchanges in South Korea delisted LTC because of its new upgrade called Mimblewimble which focuses on privacy. Citing Korean financial regulations that prohibit anonymous transactions, Upbit along with four other exchanges delisted the token from their platforms.

Despite privacy's clash with regulators, privacy is one of the innovations that the decentralized finance (DeFi) community expects in the future. In a thread on the DeFi subreddit, a user shared that they believe that projects focused on privacy can become a catalyst that spurs wider adoption.

Tether has ‘redistributed’ $108.8M USDT from illicit activity since 2014