The European Commission released an extensive set of proposals that threaten to stifle innovation in the burgeoning cryptocurrency sector in addition to subjecting crypto users to blanket surveillance.
The package includes several measures, all of which aim to increase blanket surveillance on every citizen within the EU. Apart from an EU-wide ban on physical cash payments exceeding, €10,000, one proposal also aims to dramatically increase oversight of so-called crypto asset service providers.
Cryptocurrencies aren’t going away. The EU can’t stop it. Buy Bitcoin here.
As announced by the commission this week, the framework would include yet another new task force dedicated to anti-money laundering and the combating of financial terrorism (AML/CFT). Worried about money slipping out of the clutches of a dysfunctional monetary system, the new EU AML Authority (AMLA) task force “will be the central authority coordinating national authorities to ensure the private sector correctly and consistently applies EU rules.”
It will attempt to establish a unified AML system across the EU, the “Single EU Rulebook for AML/CFT.”
“Existing national registers of bank accounts will be connected, providing faster access for FIUs to information on bank accounts and safe deposit boxes,” the commission wrote in its announcement. Law enforcement will have access to this system to accelerate the investigation of whatever it deems cross-border financial crime.
The rules are set to be extended from “only certain categories of crypto-asset service providers” to “the entire crypto sector, obliging all service providers to conduct due diligence on their customers.”
However, many service providers in the EU already conduct proper due-diligence under current rules, rendering this new initiative unclear in its scope.
These amendments “will ensure full traceability of crypto-asset transfers, such as Bitcoin, and will allow for prevention and detection of their possible use for money laundering or terrorism financing,” the EU Commission stated.
Additionally, providing so-called “anonymous crypto asset wallets” will be “prohibited” in order to force AML/CFT requirements. How the commission seeks to enforce such a ban is unclear.
In its Q&A sheet, it writes that the “proposed rules ban the possibility to open or use an anonymous crypto-asset account.”
The press release doesn’t clearly explain whether the opening of “anonymous” wallets for customised exchanges will be prohibited, or whether “anonymous” wallets will be prohibited in general. The fact that the EU wants to ban non-custodial wallets suggests an intention to completely crack down on financial privacy and freedom.
Following recommendations from the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), the EU will categorise non-EU countries depending on their assigned status by FATF, which means that countries that do not fall in line will be grey – or blacklisted.
While the legislative package must still be discussed in the European Parliament, the Commission itself is confident that the operation will be approved by 2024, assuming the EU doesn’t come apart by then.
Read More: Jack Dorsey: Bitcoin is the Native Currency of the Internet
Subscribe to the semi-weekly newsletter for regular insight into bitcoin and crypto. Go on. It’s free.
Join the telegram channel for updates, charts, ideas and deals.
Did you like the article? Share it!