The authentication systems are being updated: EPID is being replaced by DCAP because Intel is…
On the Coming Crackdown on Cryptocurrencies without Identity
In practice, using cryptocurrencies without identity means that the costs of identification are externalized to third-parties and, worse yet, repeated and incurred multiple times: KYC/AML to access online exchanges and/or for ICO participation (the cost of a check ranges from £10 to £100 for a manual identification and from £6 to £30 for an online identification). The need for anonymity is only a corner case even in cryptocurrencies specifically designed for anonymity: in Zcash, fully shielded transactions represent 1.5% of all transactions and 5% of all value.
Many countries are already banning cryptocurrency transactions without identity:
- China (Proposed Regulations for Identity on Blockchains)
- Russia (About Digital Financial Assets)
- South Korea (Ban of Anonymous Cryptocurrency Trading)
- Japan (Japan’s Financial Regulator Is Pushing Crypto Exchanges To Drop ‘Altcoins’ Favored By Criminals)
- France (Ban of Anonymous Cryptocurrency)
- Texas (Proposed Bill Requiring Identity Verification)
- the “travel rule” of the FAFT regulations
- the strict Know-Your-Customer (KYC) requirements of the European Union’s AMLD5 directive
This trend will only continue in the future as cryptocurrency usage keeps increasing.
We offer the first cryptocurrency where only real-world cryptographic identities can be used (e.g., National Identity Cards and/or ePassports) lowering the costs of identification for all parties involved and increasing the acceptance by merchants in real-world scenarios.
Holding pro-law cryptocurrency is the only safe bet.