Stablecoin Freezes Can Affect Legitimate Funds
Stablecoin freezes are typically intended to target illicit assets, but innocent users can sometimes be impacted as well.
In an interview with Bitcoin.com News this week, Jan Philipp Fritsche, co-founder of Bermuda, a privacy-focused compliance solution for Ethereum, stated that stablecoin issuers and financial institutions frequently lack the tools needed to execute enforcement actions with precision.
Consequently, attempts to freeze assets linked to unlawful activity can occasionally produce unintended consequences, leaving legitimate users with restricted funds despite facing no allegations of wrongdoing.
“Often, legitimate funds are only frozen by accident,” he said, adding:
“ Stablecoin issuers and institutions sometimes need to freeze specific illicit funds in response to court orders; however, they often lack the capabilities to do so tactically and end up freezing legitimate funds as collateral damage.”
Why Innocent Users Can Look Suspicious
Legitimate funds may also be frozen because compliance systems can misread unusual but lawful activity. Fritsche indicated that some institutions depend on flawed heuristics to identify potentially illicit behavior, increasing the likelihood that innocent users are flagged incorrectly.
“Legitimate funds may be frozen because institutions interpret them as high-risk, or likely illicit,” he said. “Institutions sometimes used flawed heuristics to monitor user behavior and freeze high-risk transactions.”
Beginners and experienced traders are especially exposed to this risk. “The two groups most at risk of having funds frozen in this way are novice crypto traders, and seasoned trading veterans — heuristics-wise, they are often the outliers,” Fritsche detailed, elaborating:
“A beginner performing random actions or a veteran trader leveraging a novel trading strategy can both appear unusual, and trigger precautionary enforcement actions.”
No Warning, Few Options
Fritsche remarked that users should not anticipate advance warning before a freeze. In some cases, issuers may be prohibited from contacting the affected user.
Pointing out that users may have few practical warning signs before a freeze, he cautioned:
“In fact, the issuer is not allowed to warn or communicate with the to-be-frozen user. Even after the fact, the user can only go through the court, which is a very tedious process.”
That situation may leave customers unable to access funds while attempting to determine why the freeze occurred.
“That also amplifies how untenable it is for Circle and others to be freezing legitimate assets,” Fritsche said. “It creates a terrible and confusing situation for their legitimate customers.”
A Reputational Risk for Stablecoins
Fritsche cautioned that mistaken freezes could damage confidence in stablecoins and crypto payment rails.
He observed:
“The most obvious is reputational harm for the industry.”
“Users rarely have their funds frozen using traditional finance. They will see stablecoins and other crypto rails as a step backwards if they deliver a decidedly worse user experience.”
Fritsche’s comments suggest that overly broad enforcement actions could erode trust in stablecoins and other crypto payment rails if legitimate users lose access to funds without warning.
This interview continues in Part 2, examining how privacy-focused blockchains can force stablecoin issuers into broad enforcement actions that affect legitimate users.
cointelegraph.com
bitcoinworld.co.in