Marc Hochstein is the managing editor of CoinDesk. The views expressed here are his own, so donât blame his co-workers.
The following article originally appeared in CoinDesk Weekly, a custom-curated newsletter delivered every Sunday exclusively to our subscribers.
Picture two $1 bills. One is crisp and immaculate, newly arrived from the U.S. Mint. The other is crumpled and covered with crumbs and boogers.
Each is worth exactly the same as the other. It doesnât matter if the crumply one previously belonged to a coke dealer or a Koch brother. Itâs still good for bus fare.
Thatâs fungibility. Itâs one of the essential properties of money that we take for granted. But in cryptocurrency, fungibility is at risk, thanks in part to the transparent nature of the blockchain, where wallet addresses are pseudonymous but the flows of funds between them are exposed for all to see.
Last week brought a reminder of that risk when Bitfury, a startup, introduced Crystal, a set of software tools to help track illicit activity on bitcoinâs public ledger.
As CoinDeskâs Michael del Castillo reported, the platform is Bitfuryâs attempt âto help bitcoin once and for all move past its association with black market transactions.â Valery Vavilov, Bitfuryâs CEO, said Crystal will enable users to âsee if this bitcoin address that youâre getting money from is green or black.â
Stepping back, Bitfury, which started as a mining operation, is not the first company to offer this sort of snooping service â as CoinDeskâs article noted, Chainalysis, Elliptic, and Skry (now a part of Bloq) are already in the market.
And to be sure, catching criminals, all else equal, is a worthy goal. (For the sake of argument, letâs assume that all the âcrimesâ being solved here are actual crimes, the kind with victims.)
Further, the surveillance provided by these companies may produce another benefit by helping other startups get or keep accounts with traditional financial institutions. Banks have been reluctant to serve the sector because of its association with illegal activities. If they could demonstrate that their clients arenât moving âdirtyâ money, they might get their regulators comfortable with the industry.
But the use of the blockchain in this manner could also have perverse effects.
As Chris Burniske and Jack Tatar write in their book âCryptoassetsâ:
âA danger for bitcoin, especially for balances known to have been used for illegal activity, is that if an exchange or other service blacklists that balance, then that balance becomes illiquid and arguably less valuable than other balances of bitcoin.â
Woe to the merchant who sells a pair of alpaca socks to a drug pusher and then canât spend the tainted coins.
And thatâs not the half of it. Burniske and Tatar go on:
âWhile subtle, losing fungibility could be the demise of a digital and distributed currency, hurting the value of all units, not just the ones used for illegal activities.â
Cryptocurrency developers are well aware of this danger and have been working for years to strengthen user privacy, which in turn would preserve (or restore) fungibility.
Some of these techniques, such as zk-snarks and ring signatures, have been pioneered on altcoins like zcash and monero, respectively. (Loss of fungibility, Burniske and Tatar write, âis one problem that monero does not have to deal with.â) Other privacy enhancements, such as TumbleBit, are being developed for bitcoin itself.
âUltimately I think the challenge will be for any analytics tool to keep up with the variations on cryptocurrencies, with a particular emphasis on the challenges posed by those that appear designed for anonymity,â said Jason Weinstein, a strategic advisor to Bitfury and former 15-year veteran of the U.S. Department of Justice who now practices law at Steptoe & Johnson LLP
Yet these enhancements may compound the regulatory challenges.
âIf you make the accounting layer as private as zcash, you might sacrifice an entire market,â said Charles Hoskinson, founder and chief executive of IOHK, a company developing several blockchain projects including Cardano.
For example, Japanâs Financial Services Agency, which must approve cryptocurrencies before they are listed on the countryâs licensed exchanges, âmay never whitelist a token thatâs high-privacy,â he said.
On the other hand, âif you donât build these types of features,â once de-anonymized, a userâs âentire financial history from the beginning of timeâ will be exposed.
âThatâs worse than the conventional banking system,â Hoskinson said.
All told, it seems that cryptocurrency is being held to a higher standard for âclean moneyâ than fiat, at least the physical version. Very few people are reading serial numbers on dollar bills. (To be fair, the comparison isnât apples-to-apples, since you canât zap a briefcase full of banknotes across the globe.)
Satoshi created bitcoin so people who donât trust each other could transact over the internet. Exposing all transactions on the blockchain was the price paid for trust in the system, and he (or she, or they) thought pseudonymous addresses would mitigate the privacy leak.
Radical transparency is often touted as a feature of blockchain technology, which it may well be for enterprises and governments. And in bitcoin, it produces secondary benefits for ordinary users as well. For example, keeping an eye on withdrawals from an exchangeâs wallet may help spot a run.
But in the use case of money, the blockchainâs openness could also turn out to be a bug. Even for law-abiding citizens.
Dirty money image via Shutterstock.