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Thus, when the leading block explorer for Ethereum information, Etherscan.io, released a product which service providers can use to track “taint” — or affiliation with criminal activity — in the deposits of coins, many weren’t so pleased.Ethereum Block Explorer Launches Surveillance
Announced in a and published April 14th, Etherscan now supports a feature called “ETHProtect,” which will monitor transactions for illegal activity and monitor addresses for suspicious interactions.“Buying into the fiction of taint is how you make it real. This sets a terrible precedent. We need all addresses to be tainted, not for users to start avoiding tainted addresses.”
Buying into the fiction of taint is how you make it real. This sets a terrible precedent. We need all addresses to be tainted, not for users to start avoiding tainted addresses. — Hasu⚡️🤖 (@hasufl)His comment was liked and shared by many in the Bitcoin space who also believe that it’s wrong to flag coins because they may be affiliated with a certain other address or transaction.
Ongoing Crypto Crackdown
The release of ETHProtect comes as the world’s governments have pledged to crack down on cryptocurrency crime in a number of different ways. Earlier this year, the White House budget proposal for the fiscal year of 2021 suggested returning the United States Secret Service — which actually enforces many financial crimes in America — to the jurisdiction of the Treasury.The budget proposal suggests that this move will “create new efficiencies” in how the Service investigates potential criminal acts enabled by “digital assets and will “prepare the Nation to face the threats of tomorrow.” Bitcoin, Ethereum, and other cryptocurrencies were not mentioned by name.
Shortly after this budget was proposed, Steven Mnuchin, the Secretary of the U.S. Treasury, the Treasury will soon roll out “significant new requirements” for cryptocurrencies and their respective service providers. Overseas, South Korea recently released a legal framework to regulate the industry, while the E.U. has rolled out new AML requirements for crypto service providers.Photo by from