Telegram Live Chat

Coinbase Urges US to Use AI and Blockchain to Fight Crypto Crime

by admin

Crypto exchange Coinbase has urged the US government to use blockchain analytics, artificial intelligence and other modern technology to curb financial crime in the space, in response to the Treasury Department’s request for comment on how to deter illicit activity in crypto. 

In the letter penned by chief legal officer Paul Grewal, dated Oct. 17 and shared to X on Monday, he argued money laundering schemes have become increasingly sophisticated through the use of advanced technologies, and law enforcement needs to follow suit to counter them. 

“Blockchain and other innovative technologies can counter these emerging risks. Treasury and other policymakers should promote their use to identify and deter illicit activity.”

“Doing so would support a primary objective of the Anti-Money Laundering Act of 2020, which sought to modernize the Bank Secrecy Act,” he added. 

Coinbase’s chief policy officer, Faryar Shirzad, reiterated this stance in an X post on Monday, arguing the US government should follow in the footsteps of crypto exchanges by embracing “innovation to modernize AML with proven digital tools like AI, APIs, digital IDs and blockchain analytics.” 

Source: Faryar Shirzad

Regulatory clarity for AI and API key to battling financial crime 

Among the measures Grewal wants Treasury to consider is a regulatory exception under the Bank Secrecy Act for companies using AI and Application Programming Interfaces (API) driven monitoring tools. 

“The conditions for that safe-harbor should focus on governance and outcomes, as opposed to forcing a one-sized-fits-all model,” he said in a follow-up X post on Monday. 

Source: Paul Grewal

Companies have been hesitant to fully unlock AI in Anti-Money Laundering measures because of a lack of regulatory clarity, according to Grewal.

He also thinks APIs face challenges such as a lack of standardization and regulatory fragmentation, which a guidance “outlining acceptable use cases” would solve by clearly showing “data privacy requirements and standards for interoperability — allowing firms to confidently adopt and integrate APIs into their programs.” 

Blockchain technology needs clearer rules, too 

At the same time, Grewal wants Treasury to publish guidance recognizing and incentivizing decentralized IDs and zero-knowledge proofs as valid forms of customer verification and blockchain analytics clustering for Anti-Money Laundering compliance.