SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce defended crypto privacy tools, arguing they protect users from surveillance and fraud.
Crypto News
US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Commissioner Hester Peirce says financial privacy is losing ground in American regulation. She made the remarks during a speech at Georgetown Law on May 28. Peirce leads the SEC's Crypto Task Force and her remarks were later published on the SEC's official website.
Peirce said cryptographic and #privacytech tools belong in modern financial systems. She argued they are not primarily associated with crime. She called for regulators to stop treating privacy-preserving technologies with suspicion.
"Empowering government to be able to identify, pursue, and punish the bad guys is important to the security of the nation and its people, but so too is empowering people to protect information about their lives, including their financial lives," she said. She also warned against letting these tools become a gateway for broader government surveillance of citizens. She added that such technologies can protect individuals from hackers, scammers, and other bad actors.
Developers Invited To Engage With SEC Task Force
Peirce called on developers building privacy tools to engage with the SEC's Crypto Task Force. She specifically encouraged outreach from teams working on tools that could support Know Your Customer (KYC) and Anti-Money Laundering (AML) compliance requirements. The invitation signals that the task force is willing to treat privacy developers as potential collaborators, not just subjects of oversight.
The broader debate over #financialprivacy in crypto has intensified over the past year. Developers and regulators have disagreed over how much protection users should have when transacting on-chain. Supporters argue these tools guard against surveillance and data theft, while critics point to potential misuse in illegal finance.
In the European Union, new AML rules are set to take effect in 2027. Under those rules, credit institutions and crypto asset service providers would be barred from maintaining anonymous accounts or handling #privacycoins. Anja Blaj, a legal consultant at the European Crypto Initiative, described maintaining access to privacy-focused digital assets as a "constant battle" between the crypto industry and regulators.
Companies have continued building in this space despite the regulatory uncertainty. Aptos released a privacy-focused coin aimed at businesses that want to conduct on-chain transactions without exposing treasury movements or trading strategies. Polygon has rolled out private stablecoin payments for institutions, framing the product as a way to drive wider on-chain adoption.
Privacy Tokens See Renewed Investor Demand
Interest in privacy-focused cryptocurrencies has grown over the past year. Zcash (ZEC) has seen sharp price increases alongside the broader discussion about financial surveillance in the #blockchain sector. The debate over how much privacy users should have in digital finance shows no sign of slowing down.
