KYC doesn’t just put your data at risk; it puts people at risk.

Hackers recently demanded $20 million in Bitcoin from Coinbase, threatening to leak sensitive customer data.

While no passwords or private keys were accessed, the attackers obtained full names, addresses, contact details, partial Social Security and bank account numbers, and identity documents. This is the kind of data that can be weaponised for identity theft, fraud, or worse.

This is exactly the kind of risk I raised on the compliance panel at the Financial Times Digital Assets Summit last week. While KYC and compliance frameworks are presented as security features, they often do the opposite. They create massive, centralised honeypots of personal data that can and do get breached, sold, or exploited.

We’ve seen what can happen when that data gets into the wrong hands. Earlier this year, David Balland, the co-founder of Ledger, was kidnapped along with his wife. His captors cut off one of his fingers and sent it to a business associate to demand crypto ransom. He was rescued by French special forces, but the message was clear: real-world consequences are now linked to digital identity exposure.

We need better solutions that don’t force users to sacrifice privacy and safety for access.

Compliance shouldn’t come at the cost of security.

https://blossom.primal.net/ac486e1dd87c2d3cb7de7f212911db32b4562b13e1faae0038e875e8b7183f4d.mov

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The extension of the FATF Travel Rule to Bitcoin raises further concerns about privacy and personal security due to mandatory KYC data sharing.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/digital-assets/2025/01/07/new-eu-rules-threaten-your-security--what-you-need-to-know/

This article discusses the implications of the CARF regulations on Bitcoin privacy, and the potential risks associated with increased KYC requirements.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/digital-assets/2024/11/24/bitcoin-privacy-at-risk-how-carf-regulations-could-impact-regulations/

I agree until the final statement!

Compliance always comes at the cost of security.

In theory, compliance and security can work together, but right now, compliance often means centralised data collection.

I agree that KYC sucks, but the co-founder story seems like a non-sequitur, how was this due to KYC?

Ledger had a data leak. While they haven’t confirmed the attack was due to it, the exposure of private KYC data is widely believed to increase the risk for high-profile individuals.

Sure, but you don't need leak data to find out who the co-founders of a company are, and I am willing to bet that the co-founder's KYC data was not in that leak.

Things are going to get even worse with the OACDs, C-A-R-F, or Crypto Asset Reporting Framework, which is set to go live in 2026.

Not only will all the names and identities of anyone who did a transfer in 2026 on an exchange be transferred, but also the balances, crypto asset type and transaction volumes also be transmitted and held.

It's still not too late for Trump to get out of that fucking commitment. But as of this state, I believe the US is a signatory. If Trump does not sign up with the other countries, then the US risks losing valuable data.

This is a whole other level of the trampling of our dignity and privacy.

Crazy. Australia too https://treasury.gov.au/consultation/c2024-598501

I hadn't heard of it and submissions were activated over Christmas and New Year Summer school holidays. How convenient for Treasury to do that. 🫤🥺

Australia and a hundred other countries will be participating in this program and it's all done quite surptitiously under the table because of the CRS system which is already in place for regular bank accounts. There is well over 100 jurisdictions who have signed up and are currently sharing your transactions with other countries for tax purposes.

They are just applying it to crypto now.

That's OECD, typo.

Let's be clear regarding this Coinbase event: customers were at risk because Coinbase was exploiting their user data well beyond what was required for KYC regulation. It's not like hackers broke into cold storage housing government-required user data. Not at all. Instead, customer service reps - who weren't required by law to have access to the data - were simply paid to hand it over.

In this case, the onus was on customers to insist on terms of service that their personal data only be used for what is required by law.

KYC should be abolished. Until then, just stop uncritically handing over your personal information with no realistic expectation for it being properly secured.

# anyone using coimbase deserves this, if you don't care to learn your own security with your own wallet, just go back tobfiat currency stored in a bank, which is what coinbase is, a

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so happy I never used coinbase

Lol. Show to me the "right" way to buy bitcoin.

Is there any? Is there a way to exchange bitcoin for fiat or fiat for bitcoin without paying huge fees? Is there a way to do that without providing all that banking data? Is there a way to trust to be protected?

Transact in bitcoin is not an answer. I can't buy food in my local store that way. I don't get paid in bitcoin. My taxes are not in bitcoin.

At this point it is safer to buy gold and goes up just the same way.

You can’t buy food at your local store with gold.

You can’t pay taxes with gold

You can get paid in Bitcoin.

I never liked the smell of Coinbase when I first got a chance to sign-up with them (as a foreigner) well before COVID. So it doesn't exactly surprise me that Hackers have targeted Coinbase for such a purpose.

What the hell are Americans giving their Social Security number to Coinbase for?? Erasing that kind of meek behaviour was what I thought Bitcoin and Crypto generally was all about!

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The gooberment can go f*@% itself and its KYC

A future full of kidnappings and ransom demands awaits us. In addition to the kyc of exchanhe, social networks are also very dangerous.

KYC is preventing me from executing my human right to privacy

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You’re tracked. ID’d. Doxxed. Every payment tied to your face, all in the name of “fighting crime.”

But Czech Justice accepted 468 BTC from a convicted criminal and sold it for $45 million.

No public record of AML checks and no transparency.

It exposes the hypocrisy between citizen surveillance and state-level unaccountability.

This is asymmetrical power and surveillance.

KYC isn’t about stopping crime. It’s about control and the weaponisation of money.

https://www.reuters.com/technology/czech-government-faces-no-confidence-vote-over-bitcoin-scandal-2025-06-12/

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