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Hester Peirce Defends Crypto Privacy Amid Tornado Cash Trial

US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Commissioner Hester Peirce told an audience of blockchain researchers and practitioners on Monday that lawmakers and regulators need to protect people’s right to transact privately. 

Her words come as Roman Storm’s Tornado Cash trial heads toward a verdict. 

Peirce said in a speech at the Science of Blockchain Conference that privacy-protecting technologies and the right to self-custody crypto should be protected, along with developers of open-source privacy software, who shouldn’t have to answer for the actions of others using the software.

“We should take concrete steps to protect people’s ability not only to communicate privately, but to transfer value privately, as they could have done with physical coins in the days in which the Fourth Amendment was crafted,” she said.

“Although a centralized intermediary or even a DAO deploying a DeFi application could build in restrictions on its use, an immutable, open-source protocol is available for anyone’s use in perpetuity, so requiring that it comply with financial surveillance measures is fruitless.”

Peirce’s comments come amid jury deliberations in the Roman Storm trial, the co-founder of crypto mixing service Tornado Cash, which offers a way to mask the origin and destination of cryptocurrency coins from prying eyes.

Source: Nate Geraci 

Stifling privacy technologies slows innovation

In the 1990s, governments, for national security reasons, wanted to keep strong cryptography out of private hands, according to Peirce.