Coinbase CEO Slams EU Over New Proposals For Bitcoin, Ethereum, Dogecoin Transactions; Parliament Passes It Anyway

Zinger Key Points
  • EU’s move means that even senders and recipients of smallest amounts of cryptocurrencies will need to be identified
  • Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong called the EU proposals “anti-innovation, anti-privacy, and anti-law enforcement”

European Union lawmakers on Thursday voted in favor of an extension of anti-money laundering (AML) requirements that would effectively end anonymous transactions involving cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin BTC/USDEthereum ETH/USD, and Dogecoin DOGE/USD.

What Happened: The proposals approved by the EU are aimed at extending AML requirements that apply to payments over 1,000 euros ($1,114) to cryptocurrencies, according to a report from CoinDesk.

The proposals were supported by more than 90 lawmakers, while members of the center-right European People’s Party (EPP) opposed the changes saying it was a “de-facto ban” on self-hosted wallets, as per the report.

Coinbase Global Inc COIN CEO Brian Armstrong called the proposals “ anti-innovation, anti-privacy, and anti-law enforcement” in a Twitter thread on Thursday.

Armstrong said the proposals mean that “before you can send or receive crypto from a self-hosted wallet, Coinbase will be required to collect, store, and verify information on the other party, which is not our customer, before the transfer is allowed.”

As more AML legislation is passed, concerns regarding the viability of privacy coins like  Monero (XMR)  have arose among investors.

See Also: How To Buy Bitcoin (BTC)

Why It Matters: The provisions will eliminate the lower limit for cryptocurrency payments, which means payers and recipients of even the tiniest amounts of cryptocurrencies would need to be identified — including those people that use unhosted or self-hosted wallets, reported CoinDesk.

Simon Lelieveldt, a former policy analyst at the Dutch central bank, said in relation to the EU's approach that “No way this will stand up over time, but in 15 years' time a lot of damage can be done still."

Earlier in the month, the EU’s Parliament’s Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs voted down a bill that would outright ban proof-of-work cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin and Ethereum. Had that measure passed, the multinational body would have effectively banned such cryptocurrencies on its territory. 

The latest measures by the EU must be approved by both parliament and national ministers, who meet in the EU Council, according to CoinDesk.

Price Action: At press time, over 24 hours, Bitcoin traded 4.2% lower at $45,081.82, Ethereum traded 3.2% lower at $3,277.66, and Dogecoin traded 3.8% lower at $0.14, according to Benzinga Pro data. 

Read Next: Bitcoin Bull Cathie Wood Scoops Up $18.9M Worth Of Shares In This Crypto Exchange

 

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