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Thursday Nov 20 2025 21:50
2 min
The US Securities and Exchange Commission’s (SEC) Crypto Task Force is scheduled to hold a roundtable discussion on December 15th, focusing on privacy and financial surveillance within the cryptocurrency industry. This comes as a renewed emphasis on privacy grips the crypto sector, fueled by recent legal developments.
As is typical for SEC roundtables, crypto industry executives and SEC officials will engage in discussions about common pain points and potential solutions. However, it's important to note that no firm policy proposals will be submitted during this meeting.
Privacy has become a hot-button issue following several significant developments, including the partial guilty verdict in Tornado Cash developer Roman Storm’s trial in June, the sentencing of a Samourai Wallet developer in November, and the price surge of privacy-focused cryptocurrencies over the past two months.
Naomi Brockwell, founder of the Ludlow Institute, an organization advocating for liberty through technology, believes that "Authoritarians thrive when people have no privacy. When those in charge start being hostile to privacy protections, it is a major red flag."
This renewed interest in privacy harkens back to the cypherpunk origins of cryptocurrency and one of the core reasons behind the invention of cryptographic technology – to ensure secure communication channels between parties in hostile environments.
The verdict in the Storm trial and other cases where open-source software developers have been convicted or imprisoned for creating non-custodial, privacy-preserving protocols has set a dangerous precedent for privacy technology in the US, according to legal experts.
Crypto industry executives and advocates argue that these prosecutions are intended to deter developers from building privacy-enhancing tools.
Lola Leetz, a journalist and crypto advocate, suggests that the verdict in the Samourai Wallet case is analogous to the US government accusing car manufacturer Toyota of conspiracy because terrorists and criminals also use their cars.
"People should not be held accountable for what other people do with the tools they build," Leetz states.
In August, Matthew Galeotti, the acting assistant attorney general for the Department of Justice’s criminal division, indicated that the agency would no longer prosecute open-source software developers for writing code.
Galeotti stated, "Our view is that merely writing code, without ill intent, is not a crime. The department will not use indictments as a law-making tool. The department should not leave innovators guessing as to what could lead to criminal prosecution."
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