HomeNEWSAtkins, Peirce Stress Balancing Crypto Transparency and Privacy at SEC Roundtable

Atkins, Peirce Stress Balancing Crypto Transparency and Privacy at SEC Roundtable

The SEC Crypto Task Force’s Roundtable on Financial Surveillance and Privacy is currently taking place in Washington D.C. 

SEC Chairman Paul S. Atkins just addressed the ongoing SEC Crypto Task Force Roundtable on Financial Surveillance and Privacy by touching on the dual nature of public blockchain technology and the need to balance government oversight with individual privacy rights.

Atkins underscored that public blockchains are “more transparent than any legacy financial system ever built,” with every transaction recorded on a ledger accessible to anyone.

Atkins also said that chain analytics firms are already adept at linking on-chain activity to off-chain identities, warning that, if misapplied, crypto could become “the most powerful financial surveillance architecture ever invented.”

The chairman cautioned against a regulatory approach that treats every wallet as a broker and every transaction as reportable, which he said could transform the ecosystem into a “financial panopticon.” 

Such transparency, Atkins explained, could also disrupt traditional market functions: real-time visibility of orders, hedges, and portfolio adjustments could incentivize front-running, copycat strategies, and other dynamics that make market-making and underwriting less attractive.

Privacy in crypto and blockchain 

At the same time, Atkins highlighted the privacy-preserving capabilities of blockchain technology. He pointed to blockchain that allow users to demonstrate compliance without revealing their entire financial history. 

Such tools, he said, could enable regulated platforms to screen users while avoiding permanent, detailed tracking of individual transactions.

“Shielding the lawful activity of our citizens from bulk surveillance while still ensuring that our government can perform essential functions is the best way to protect both national security and our basic civil liberties while also giving room for innovation to flourish,” Atkins said.

He concluded by stressing the importance of creating a regulatory framework that protects Americans’ privacy without stifling technological or financial innovation.

Although he could not remain for the entire roundtable, Atkins expressed confidence that the discussions would help shape policies that uphold both security and personal freedom.

In later opening comments, Commissioner Hester Peirce emphasized that tokenized securities and other crypto assets allow transactions to occur without traditional intermediaries like brokers, reducing the flow of information to government surveillance channels. 

She noted that while disintermediated transactions limit traditional oversight, public blockchains remain fully transparent, creating both opportunities and challenges for monitoring.

Peirce argued that the U.S. financial system’s longstanding erosion of privacy is overdue for reassessment, with crypto pushing the conversation forward.

As crypto adoption grows, Peirce called for thoughtful reevaluation of how and when financial transactions are surveilled, balancing the need to protect consumers from bad actors with preserving privacy rights. 

Micah Zimmerman
Micah Zimmerman
Micah first discovered Bitcoin in 2018 but remained a skeptic on the sidelines for too long. Since 2021, he has covered crypto and business and now works as a news reporter for Bitcoin Magazine, based in North Carolina.
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