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For years anonymous crypto-currencies have been criminals’ favorite method of hiding and laundering their money. That could all be about to end. Mike Orcutt explains at the MIT Technology Review that the Financial Action Task Force, a global standard-setting group, has put cryptocurrencies in its crosshairs. The group wants to clamp down on cryptocurrencies being used as a way to launder money. Orcutt reports:

One of the biggest knocks against cryptocurrency has always been its status as a refuge for tech-savvy criminals. Even as some bigger playersโ€”particularly exchanges that handle many billions of dollars in crypto-wealth each dayโ€”have gone out of their way to play niceย with regulators, the image persists, in part because some crypto firms haveย evaded regulators by moving to jurisdictionsย that are less strict.ย 

But the end of the lawless era may be nigh. A new set of global anti-money-laundering rules aimed at cryptocurrency exchanges has been handed down by the Financial Action Task Force, an intergovernmental organization that sets standards for policing money laundering and terrorist financing. The rules, which call on exchanges to share personal information about their users with each other, are controversial. Many cryptocurrency enthusiasts think the privacy that drew them to the technology could evaporate. On the other hand, complying with the rules is likely to make the industry more attractive to mainstream financial institutions and users. In other words, cha-ching.

The cryptocurrency market is small and immature compared with markets for traditional stocks and bonds, but the criminals trying to profit from itย are among the most sophisticated in the worldโ€”and they are reaping bigger and bigger rewards. โ€œUnfortunately, we keep seeing the criminal numbers go up and up and up,โ€ saysย Dave Jevans, CEO of blockchain analytics firm CipherTrace, which is developing an anti-money-laundering product for exchanges. According to aย new reportย published by the company, thieves and scammers took an estimated $4.26 billion from cryptocurrency exchanges, investors, and users in the first half of 2019. โ€œAll of that stuff has to be laundered out,โ€ Jevans says.ย 

What draws criminals to cryptocurrency is the capacity for anonymous, peer-to-peer value transfer. Technically, most cryptocurrency systems are pseudonymousโ€”users are identified publicly, but only by a string of random numbers and letters. Sinceย every transaction is recorded on a public ledger, criminals resort to a range of tactics, including using multiple addresses and exchanges, to cover their tracksย as they move ill-gotten money around.ย 

In regulated jurisdictions like the US, Japan, and EU, exchangesโ€”the bridges between the traditional financial system and the cryptocurrency worldโ€”are already required to verify the identities of their users, a process commonly called โ€œknow your customer.โ€ But many exchanges around the worldย have lax policiesย that allow people to move money or cash out without identifying themselves.ย 

The โ€œtravel ruleโ€

In June the Financial Action Task Force (FATF; pronounced โ€œfat Fโ€) published a much anticipated, technically nonbindingย guidanceย detailing expectations of how its 37 member jurisdictions should regulate their respective โ€œvirtual assetโ€ marketplaces. Hereโ€™s the contentious part: whenever a user of one exchange sends cryptocurrency worth more than 1,000 dollars or euros to a user of a different exchange, the originating exchange must โ€œimmediately and securelyโ€ share identifying information about both the senderย andย the intended recipient with the beneficiary exchange. That information should also be made available to โ€œappropriate authorities on request.โ€

Besides deterring would-be money launderers, this makes it possible to blacklist certain individuals who are subject to economic sanctions, as well as entities like terrorist organizations. Itโ€™s essentially a crypto version of a US banking regulation commonly called the โ€œtravel rule,โ€ which imposes a similar requirement on traditional financial institutions (though theย threshold is $3,000). In the US, crypto exchanges have always been subject to this rule, according to a recentย guidanceย from the Treasury Departmentโ€™s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network. The agency just hasnโ€™t started enforcing it yet.ย 

I’ve shared my thoughts on bitcoin and Blockchain technologies with you, and written to you about the future possibilities of crypto.

if the task force’s recommendations are adopted, and crypto is clamped down, there could be major changes in the prices for crypto currencies, and future demand.

Originally posted on Your Survival Guy.ย