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Putting the news into perspective

The Takeaway

'Crack Down' on Crypto? Maybe, But You Can't Ban Math

In recent days, following the invasion of Ukraine and the West's disabling economic sanction of Russia – an unprecedented retaliatory move – there has been increased chatter that governments and international bodies may step up efforts to "crack down" on cryptocurrency


Like most everything involving cryptocurrency, this conversation is speculative. The argument is that non-state, blockchain-based monetary networks might help the Russian government and oligarchs evade sanctions; and so, if the West's economic blockade is to be effective, it needs to tighten access to crypto. 

 

This fear is partially grounded in fact. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, for instance, tweeted last week, "Cryptocurrencies risk undermining sanctions against Russia, allowing Putin and his cronies to evade economic pain. … U.S. financial regulators need to take this threat seriously and increase their scrutiny of digital assets." The Massachusetts Democrat renewed her call to action today.

 

Likewise, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said Wednesday that the ongoing war "underscores" the need for cryptocurrency regulation. European power brokers have voiced similar concerns. French Economy and Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said: "We are taking measures, in particular on cryptocurrencies or crypto assets, which should not be used to circumvent the financial sanctions decided upon by the 27 EU countries."

 

Still, the fear that crypto could be banned is mostly rooted in uncertainty and doubt. It's worth noting that calls to "crack down" on the industry, a common phrase, are imprecise. What would a "crackdown" look like over and above the rules to increase surveillance and compliance already being discussed or enforced today

 

It's true too that Powell, Warren and their ilk are also being fairly cryptic in their calls for increased "scrutiny" of and "measures" over crypto. That could mean anything – hence the fear, uncertainty and doubt. But it cannot seriously mean a blanket ban of blockchains. 

 

You can't ban math

Around the time of the fall of the Soviet Union, the U.S. was leading a battle to kill consumer encryption. For most of history, encryption – the ciphers used to send secret messages – was primarily developed and guarded by governments. Various militaries are credited with creating the first paper codices and first digital cryptographies to protect war correspondence. At the height of the Cold War, the U.S. placed strict controls over the export of commercial and military encryption.

 

This changed with the advent of the internet. Early cypherpunks saw that computer networks could easily be surveilled and worked to design codes to foster privacy. That was the environment in which, in 1991, computer scientist Phil Zimmermann released the public-key program humbly named Pretty Good Privacy (PGP) and kickstarted the "Crypto Wars."

 

The United States Customs Service alleged that Zimmermann had violated the Arms Export Control Act that forbade the export of "strong" cryptography and opened a criminal investigation. Around the same time, the Clinton administration tried to legally force companies to write in backdoors into commercial encryption technologies, called "clipper chips."

 

Due to a confluence of factors, including PGP's wide adoption and MIT publishing its code as "open source," regulators were essentially forced to drop the case. More importantly, privacy advocates made the case that code was math, and that math was speech. Suppressing encryption would be unconstitutional – the cat was out of the bag. 

 

"We won in the courts, Congress and public opinion," the Electronic Frontier Foundation, one of the leading organizations advocating for strong encryption, later wrote

 

That hasn't necessarily stopped governments from trying to quash a host of industries based on encryption and supercharged by the internet. These include attempts to "crack down" on facial recognition, artificial intelligence and private communication through end-to-end encryption – although strict regulation or bans of those industries might be desirable (considering their dystopian prospects).

 

Encryption likewise serves as the basis for cryptocurrencies (that's the "crypto" part; I think we're still figuring out what "currency" means). It sounds "just so," but that's essentially the reason that an outright ban of bitcoin (BTC) or ethereum (ETH) is unlikely. 

 

Not only is there legal and constitutional precedent, but knowledge has flooded the plain. (Imagine trying to ban a recipe for cookies.) PGP wasn't nearly as widespread as Bitcoin software is today.

 

Regulated channels

Still, even if cryptocurrencies are open source, open access and protected by speech laws at the command-line level, most consumers access crypto through intermediaries. These on-ramps can and ought to be regulated – and should be part of sanctions packages against Russia. 

 

Indeed, they are. As part of the "Russian Harmful Foreign Activities Sanctions Regulations," the U.S. Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) is set to issue new rules to prevent people from interacting with prohibited Russian entities. This means that crypto exchanges and service providers will blacklist any assets believed to be owned by a targeted group of Russians. 

 

Salman Banaei, Chainalysis' head of public policy for North America, said on CoinDesk TV's "First Mover" that there are about 100 wallet addresses identified in OFAC's sanctions package. 

 

Although there are calls, including from the Ukrainian government, to issue a blanket ban to prevent all or most Russians from accessing crypto networks, such rules have yet to be written. 

 

Read the full column here.

 

Daniel Kuhn

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The core members of BitBTC met Minhua Ouyang (Bonnybb.eth) in New York, where they learned she had started creating NFTs in July 2019 and was one of the earliest NFT creators in the city. After brainstorming with BitBTC team members, she decided to create the Satoshi NFT project.

 

*This is sponsored content from BitBTC.

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