Crypto winter teaches tough lessons about custody and taking control

Cointelegraph发布于2022-09-02更新于2022-09-02

文章摘要

Many agree that digital assets should be held in hard wallets, but recent actions in the EU and the U.S. may make that more difficult, not easier.

The crypto winter has pumped new life into the adage “Not your keys, not your coins,” particularly after the collapse of some high-profile enterprises like the Celsius Network, whose funds were frozen in June. Just last week, Ledger CEO Pascal Gauthier hammered home the point further, warning: “Don’t trust your coins and your private keys to anyone because you don’t know what they’re going to do with it.”

The basic idea behind the adage, familiar to many crypto veterans, is that if you don’t personally hold your private keys (i.e., passwords) in an offline “cold wallet,” then you don’t really control your digital assets. But, Gauthier was also framing the issue in a larger context as the world moves from Web2 to Web3:

“A lot of people are still in Web2 [...] because they want to stay in the matrix where they’re being controlled, because it’s easier, it’s you know just click yes yes yes and then someone else is going to deal with your problems.”

But, giving away control won’t set you free. “Taking responsibility is how you become free.”

Admittedly, Gauthier has a self-interest here — Ledger is one of the world’s largest cold-wallet providers. Then, too, he may have been stating the obvious. In May, Coinbase acknowledged in an SEC 10-Q filing that if it ever went bankrupt, customers that entrusted their digital assets to the exchange “could be treated as our general unsecured creditors,” i.e., could find themselves standing at the back of the creditors’ line in bankruptcy proceedings.

“It doesn’t matter that the exchange’s contract with you says you ‘own’ the currency,” Georgetown University law professor Adam Levitin told Barron's at the time, “That’s not determinative of what will happen in bankruptcy.”

But, Gauthier’s statement raises other questions, too. This notion of seizing “control” of one’s keys and coins could become more complicated given recent regulatory proposals in Europe, as well as a key government agency interpretation in the United States. Moreover, as the world transitions from Web2 to Web3, is it really so certain that centralized solutions like Coinbase and others might still not have an important role to play with regard to custody and, yes, even privacy?

Learning the hard way

Generally speaking, it appears that consumers still do not understand the potential risks when they turn their crypto private keys over to centralized platforms and exchanges.

“It’s been made abundantly clear that even the most seemingly trustworthy custodians can still make grave missteps with user funds,” Nick Saponaro, CEO at the Divi Project, told Cointelegraph. “The promise of self-sovereign ownership of your money is immediately obliterated when users hand over their private keys to any third-party, regardless of that third-party's genuine intent.”

“All crypto users should learn and be responsible for the security of their own coins by storing them securely on hardware wallets,” Bobby Ong, co-founder and chief operating officer at CoinGecko, told Cointelegraph.“However, this is not a popular move because for most crypto users, it is probably more convenient to store them on centralized exchanges.”

Still, a centralized exchange (CEX) can be useful at times and maybe we should expect to live in a hybrid cryptoverse for a while, with both cold and hot wallets, centralized and decentralized exchanges (DEXs).

“There is a case for using centralized exchanges for sending funds to others to not doxx your crypto addresses,” said Ong. “This is because when you send a transaction to someone else, they will know your address and can see your balance, historical transactions, and all future transactions.”

Indeed, Ong tweeted recently: “The basic advice now is to have multiple wallets for various purposes and to fund these wallets using centralized exchanges. This works well but it’s not good enough. If you use FTX or Binance, Uncle Sam and Changpeng Zao will know all your wallets and they can profile you instead.”

Continued Ong, “To get full privacy for your new wallet, a service like Tornado Cash is needed. Granted, it’s probably more expensive, slow and tedious,” but having such an option would ensure privacy and make crypto behave more like cash, he added.

Justin d’Anethan, institutional sales director at Amber Group, agreed that trade-offs remain. “You can’t do as many sophisticated trades from a private wallet as you can on a centralized platform, or at least not as easily and efficiently,” he told Cointelegraph. Large, sophisticated traders will always need to have some of their holdings on exchanges to optimize returns. In his personal case:

“I hold a chunk of my core holdings in private wallets, but I definitely hold some assets on centralized platforms for yield generation, some rebalancing, etc.”

Corporate entities, especially, may not want to handle the operational side of a trade, including investment and custody, and they may also want to interact with a recognized and established centralized entity that can perform due diligence. Also, corporations may want to have an identifiable and liquid entity to sue “in the event of an error,” added d’Anethan.

On the retail side, setting up a private wallet can still be daunting, which may explain why so many entrust private keys to CEXs and the like, even if it isn’t always the best way. As d’Anethan told Cointelegraph:

“You might not know how — or have the motivation — to buy a private wallet, set it up to hold your private key and bear the risk of losing it. So, the path of least resistance wins.”

Do regulators still not “get it?”

Elsewhere, self-hosted wallet providers may soon face tough regulations in Europe if and when the EU’s Transfer of Funds Regulation (TFR) proposal takes hold. It could overturn this whole notion about taking control of one’s private keys and coins.

“Effectively, it would amount to a ‘de facto’ ban on self-hosted wallets by enforcing to connect personal identities with self-hosted wallets,” wrote Philipp Sandner and Agata Ferreira.

Mikolaj Barczentewicz, associate professor at the United Kingdom’s University of Surrey, told Cointelegraph:

“The TFR proposal doesn’t ban self-custodied wallets, but it does incentivize service providers to treat them as ‘high risk’ for money laundering.[…] It may become practically very difficult to transact using self-hosted wallets.”

Defenders of the TFR might respond that it’s not regulators’ fault that businesses are not better at risk-based analysis and at distinguishing situations of genuinely high risk of criminality, but “I don’t think that answer works,” continued Barczentewicz. “It shows a lack of understanding — or care — for the fact that regulations need to be designed to be workable in the real world. The EU is basically saying to businesses: ‘You figure it out.’”

However, the biggest threat to self-custodied wallets in Barczentewicz’s view “is something like the scenario we’ve been watching in reaction to Tornado Cash being sanctioned by the U.S.: Businesses are afraid and engaging in over-compliance, doing more than the law requires.”

As reported, on Aug. 8, the United States Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) issued legal sanctions against digital currency mixer Tornado Cash for its role in laundering over $455 million worth of cryptocurrency stolen by the North Korean-linked hacking organization Lazarus Group.

According to data analytics firm Chainalysis, the obligations of non-custodial crypto wallet providers are now unclear under OFAC’s recent designation: “An extreme interpretation could mean that non-custodial wallet providers might also need to block transfers to the sanctioned addresses, though this would be unprecedented.”

At a minimum, government actions like these suggest that cold-wallet solutions to help crypto users take control of their private keys could become more problematic — not less — at least in the immediate future.

An education imperative?

Overall, does the crypto industry face an education challenge here i.e., to explain the importance of cold storage and individual “responsibility” to both individuals and policymakers?

“I think we have to be honest with ourselves,” answered Saponaro. “Yes, education can help some individuals avoid the pitfalls we’ve witnessed in recent months, but most people will not read every article, watch every video or take the time to educate themselves.” Developers have a responsibility to develop products that guide users “into learning by doing.”

“The crypto community, including in the EU, can still do much more to educate policymakers,” added Barczentewicz. “But this education cannot be limited to just explaining how crypto works. It is a mistake to think that once policymakers ‘get it,’ they will come up with sensible rules on their own.”

The crypto community needs to be proactive in proposing detailed technical and regulatory notions of how to fight crime and malfeasance without giving up key benefits of crypto, like self-custody, he said. “It is not enough just to mention buzzwords like ‘zero knowledge proofs’ and then expect the policymakers to do the hard work.”

Is taking “control” really important?

What about Gauthier’s larger point that people simply have to learn to take "responsibility" for their assets — digital and otherwise — because “taking responsibility is how you become free?”

“Crypto is a game-changer because we now have full control of our money without the need to trust any third-party,” said Ong. That said, some people “may choose to pass on the responsibility and trust a third-party custodian who may be better equipped to store their coins safely — and that is acceptable too,” he told Cointelegraph.

“In the crypto space, you typically have very binary opinions about how things can grow from here. I think the truth is somewhat in the middle,” said d’Anethan, adding:

“One is delusional if one thinks every individual and corporate is going full DeFi tomorrow. But, one would also be delusional if one thinks the growing digital world will forever stay within the Web2 infrastructure.”

What may be best is to have both centralized and decentralized platforms, “so that the user base can gradually shift where it sees the most value — however long that takes,” he said.

热门币种推荐

你可能也喜欢

赛场之外:围绕世界杯的逐利游戏

《赛场之外:围绕世界杯的逐利游戏》一文揭示了2026年世界杯如何成为一个巨大的全球投机窗口。文章指出,这项赛事不仅吸引了球迷,更催生出一套完整的投机生态。 文章从七个层面剖析了这一现象: 1. **预测市场崛起**:以Polymarket和Kalshi为代表的预测平台交易量暴增,其链上财富故事极具传播力,正挑战传统体育博彩。 2. **传统体育博彩**:尽管面临新兴市场冲击,传统博彩凭借成熟用户和庞大市场,仍是世界杯投机的最大基本盘,预计美国相关投注额将达数百亿美元。 3. **股市概念炒作**:球队战绩直接影响相关“概念股”股价,如韩国的炸鸡股、日本的直播平台和运动品牌股,股价随赛果剧烈波动,成为“情绪盘口”。 4. **门票转售套利**:门票在二级市场成为套利工具,价格因球队、球星、地点等因素差异巨大。甚至出现了类似“卖空”的操作,以及FIFA官方“购票权”(RTB)的“二阶投机”。 5. **藏品与周边投机**:Panini贴纸因稀缺性和收藏价值在二级市场可能身价暴涨;限量版或带有身份象征的球衣也被热炒,假货市场同样活跃以满足球迷的现场表达需求。 6. **加密货币狂热**:世界杯催生了大量未经授权的主题Meme币,它们在短期内可能制造惊人回报,但更多是暴涨暴跌的投机工具,风险极高。 7. **内容与信息服务**:有人通过开发门票比价工具、出售付费投注推荐等方式,为投机者提供信息和工具,从庞大的信息需求中获利。 文章总结,世界杯赛场之外,一个围绕注意力、情绪和稀缺资源的全球交易网络悄然运行,真正的赢家往往是那些最早洞察并利用这种注意力流动规则的人。

marsbit1小时前

赛场之外:围绕世界杯的逐利游戏

marsbit1小时前

Hyperliquid ETF资产声明引关注,HYPE叙事在X平台持续升温

一篇X平台推文声称,三只在2026年5月推出的Hyperliquid(HYPE)交易所交易基金(ETF)已合计积累了1.58亿美元的资产,从而引发了市场关注。 根据用户AlphaOnChain的帖子,其中Bitwise HYPE ETF据称拥有8800万美元资产,21Shares HYPE ETF则为6600万美元。然而,此数据来源于社交媒体,并非官方基金发行人的正式文件或数据看板,因此需要谨慎对待,更多应被视为市场情绪和话题热度的风向标。 这一话题的热度反映了当前加密市场的关注点可能正在从比特币、以太坊等主流资产向外扩散。Hyperliquid以其链上永续交易和交易所生态而闻名,如果相关ETF产品确实吸引了可观的资金流入,可能表明机构和散户投资者开始将目光投向更具潜力的山寨币领域。HYPE本身结合了去中心化金融(DeFi)、衍生品和交易所基础设施等多个叙事,使其在交易者转向高风险资产时成为一个自然的炒作标的。 对于交易者而言,关键在于区分社交媒体热度与基本面支撑。尽管社交讨论可能在短期内影响市场,但持续的价格上行通常需要经过验证的资金流入、充足的流动性以及生态系统的持续成长作为基础。 因此,虽然Hyperliquid ETF的叙事正在获得更多关注,但在获得官方数据证实前,投资者应保持审慎态度。

bitcoinist3小时前

Hyperliquid ETF资产声明引关注,HYPE叙事在X平台持续升温

bitcoinist3小时前

交易

现货
合约

热门文章

加密市场宏观研报:《GENIUS Act》法案取得重大进展,BTC突破历史新高,后市全新展望

2025年5月22日,比特币价格正式突破11万美元大关,创下历史新高。在政策面、宏观经济、资金面与投资者结构共同作用下,一场结构性牛市浪潮正在展开。而此轮上涨背后的核心驱动,是美国《GENIUS稳定币法案》的实质性进展以及多项利好的叠加。本文将从政策端突破、宏观环境转向、链上与ETF资金结构、交易行为演化,以及重点受益赛道五大维度,全面解析此轮BTC再创新高的深层逻辑,并前瞻下半年市场的潜在趋势。

1.7k人学过发布于 2025.05.22更新于 2025.05.22

加密市场宏观研报:《GENIUS Act》法案取得重大进展,BTC突破历史新高,后市全新展望

相关讨论

欢迎来到HTX社区。在这里,您可以了解最新的平台发展动态并获得专业的市场意见。以下是用户对BTC(BTC)币价的意见。

活动图片