US Treasury Eyes Digital ID in DeFi Smart Contracts to Curb Illicit Finance
The proposal comes as part of the Treasury’s public consultation under the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for US Stablecoins Act (GENIUS Act), signed into law in July. The Act, designed to set guardrails fo...
The proposal comes as part of the Treasury’s public consultation under the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for US Stablecoins Act (GENIUS Act), signed into law in July. The Act, designed to set guardrails for stablecoin issuers, also tasks regulators with exploring how cutting-edge compliance tools — APIs, AI, blockchain monitoring, and digital IDs — might rein in illicit finance in crypto markets.
KYC at the Code LevelOne suggestion in Treasury’s request for comment is radical: building Know Your Customer (KYC) and Anti-Money Laundering (AML) checks into the very fabric of DeFi code. In practice, this could mean that before a smart contract executes a transaction, it verifies whether a user’s digital credential — perhaps tied to a government ID, biometric scan, or portable digital wallet — meets regulatory standards.
This “compliance by design” approach would automate identity checks, potentially making it impossible to use DeFi protocols anonymously, while reducing the need for intermediaries to run manual KYC processes.
U.S. Treasury To Consider digital ID verification For DeFi Use, Source: Laz
Efficiency vs. PrivacyTreasury argues that digital identity systems could lower compliance costs and actually enhance privacy by letting users prove they meet requirements without disclosing more data than necessary. At the same time, regulators admit the model raises thorny issues — from safeguarding sensitive data to preserving the open, permissionless character of blockchain systems.
“Input on any matter relevant to Treasury’s efforts is welcome,” the agency noted, emphasizing it wants industry feedback before drawing up concrete rules. The consultation is open until October 17, 2025, after which the Treasury will deliver recommendations to Congress and potentially draft new regulations.
Banking Sector PushbackThe consultation arrives amid a parallel lobbying push from the banking sector. Last week, heavyweight U.S. banking groups — led by the Bank Policy Institute (BPI) — warned Congress that loopholes in the GENIUS Act could let stablecoin issuers quietly offer yield products through affiliates. The group claims such a scenario could divert as much as $6.6 trillion in deposits from traditional banks, destabilizing credit markets.
The Big PictureFor DeFi, the prospect of hard-coded identity checks is a fork in the road. On one hand, regulators see digital IDs as a way to blunt money laundering, terrorism financing, and sanctions evasion before funds even move. On the other, critics argue that baking KYC into smart contracts could strangle the very qualities — openness, pseudonymity, censorship resistance — that make DeFi revolutionary.
Whether the GENIUS Act ushers in safer, more mainstream DeFi rails or smothers innovation under a compliance-heavy blanket will likely depend on how the Treasury balances its twin mandates: financial security and technological freedom.
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