Bamra estimated the institutional digital-finance market at roughly $35 billion today, against more than $200 trillion in annual clearing-house flows in conventional finance, with growth of “over 100 or 150%” in the past 18 months. Blockchain architecture, he predicted, will not be uniformly public or private but a hybrid. “Private permission networks are going to offer the accountability, the credibility aspect,” he said, while “the public permissionless brings the liquidity which the private permissions don’t.”

Pauline Shangett, chief strategy officer at the non-custodial exchange ChangeNOW, firmly sided with the user-side argument. “Bitcoin at its core, at its origin was a semi-anonymous digital cash,” she said.

ChangeNOW, which does not enforce KYC by default, works with AML providers and blockchain forensics firms to monitor flows at the wallet-address level. “All of this blockchain forensics infrastructure allows us to not map people who are passing funds through our system, but instead map their addresses,” Shangett said.

When law-enforcement agencies come to ChangeNOW, Shangett said, the company provides transaction data without doxing the person behind the transaction. She said that compromise allows the platform to provide registration-free swaps while still maintaining internal accounting systems and working with authorities when illegitimate funds move through the service.

On regulation, Bamra said cross-border frameworks like the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation and the U.S. GENIUS Act ask the same fundamental questions about asset quality, segregation and liability, but diverge sharply at the specifications layer. “We think there is regulatory convergence in intention, but there’s fragmentation in reality or in execution,” he said.

Shangett ended with a regulatory-liability framing, which she suggested cuts to the heart of where responsibility should actually sit.

“The agents who should be held liable for the regulatory frameworks and the adoption thereof are agents who are dealing with emission and not transmission,” she said.

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Vitalik Buterin (CoinDesk Archives)

The Ethereum co-founder, who has spent months campaigning against toxic MEV with proposals for encrypted mempools, just had one of his own swaps front-run and back-run by the network’s most notorious sandwich bot.

What to know:

  • Vitalik Buterin, a leading critic of toxic maximal extractable value (MEV), was himself targeted by a sandwich attack on April 30, blockchain data show.
  • In the incident, a bot known as jaredfromsubway.eth sandwiched Buterin’s small swap of digitalbits (XDB) for ether, using about $1.14 million in WETH to manipulate prices…

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