

The decentralized finance (DeFi) industry is breathing a sigh of
relief as Congress relaxes reporting obligations, but questions
remain about how lawmakers will regulate DeFi.
On March 12, the House of Representatives voted to nullify a
rule that required DeFi protocols to report gross proceeds from
crypto sales, as well as info on taxpayers involved, to the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS).
The rule, which the IRS issued in December 2024 and wasn’t set
to take effect until 2027, was regarded by major
industry lobby groups as burdensome and beyond the agency’s
authority.
The White House has already signaled its
support for the bill. President Donald Trump is ready to sign
when it reaches his desk. But DeFi observers note that the industry
has yet to strike a balance between privacy and
regulation.
Bipartisan vote on repealing the rule. Source:
DeFi
Education Fund
Privacy concerns over IRS DeFi rule
The crypto industry was quick to laud the vote in the House.
Marta Belcher, president of the Filecoin Foundation, said that
blocking the rule was particularly important for user
privacy.
She told Cointelegraph it is “critical to protect people’s
ability to transact directly with each other via open-source code
(like smart contracts and decentralized exchanges) while remaining
anonymous, in the same way that people can transact directly with
each other using cash.”
Privacy concerns were central to the crypto industry’s
objections to the rule, with industry observers claiming that it
was not fit for purpose and infringed on user privacy.
Bill Hughes, senior counsel and director of global regulatory
matters for Consensys Software wrote in December
2024, “Trading front ends would have to track and report on user
activity — both US persons and non-US persons [...] And it applies
to the sale of every single digital asset — including NFTs and even
stablecoins.”
The Blockchain Association, a major crypto industry lobby group,
stated that
the rule was “an infringement on the privacy rights of individuals
using decentralized technology” that would push DeFi offshore.
While the rule has been stopped for now, there still aren’t
fixed privacy guidelines in place — something Etherealize CEO Vivek
Raman said the industry needs to move forward.
“There needs to be clear frameworks for blockchain-based privacy
while maintaining [Know Your Customer/Anti-Money Laundering]
requirements,” he told Cointelegraph.
Raman stated that some transactions and customer data will need
to remain private, “and we need guidance on what privacy can look
like.”
How do you regulate DeFi?
The crypto space has long juggled user privacy demands and
regulators’ Anti-Money Laundering and Know Your Customer
concerns.
One problem lies in the technology itself — if a network is
created by many and controlled by no single entity, who can the
government contact?
Per Raman, “It’s hard for a decentralized protocol that is
controlled by nobody to issue 1099s or fulfill broker-dealer
responsibilities! Companies can certainly be [broker-dealers], but
software has not been designed for [broker-dealer] rules.”
DeFi developers can and have been proactive in working with
regulators, Chainalysis suggested, as was
the case with certain protocols freezing funds after the disastrous
$285 million KuCoin hack.
Related: Timeline: How Bybit's lost Ethereum went through
North Korea's washing machine
Cinneamhain Ventures partner and consultant Adam Cochran
claimed that every
protocol has certain pressure points regulators could press on if a
protocol were used to commit a crime:
Source: Adam
Cochran
However, these specific instances do not make a comprehensive
regulatory framework that both the industry and investor protection
agencies can point to.
In that regard, crypto analytics firm Chainalysis
stated in 2020
that regulators may need to craft regulations for the DeFi space
with decentralized reporting limitations in mind.
Raman suggested that one possible solution could be
zero-knowledge proofs, which allow users to confirm certain data
without revealing it.
He is optimistic about regulators’ ability to find a way to
regulate the space while still maintaining user privacy: “I think
we’ll see a positive sum environment where DeFi and compliance will
coexist.”
The long-awaited crypto regulatory framework
Trump has already made a number of pro-crypto measures through
executive orders and appointing pro-crypto individuals to head
parts of his administration — the most recent being the
establishment of a strategic Bitcoin reserve.
Related: US
Rep. Byron Donalds to introduce bill codifying Trump’s Bitcoin
reserve
The pro-crypto tenure of important financial regulators like the
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission (CFTC) has dropped a number of high-profile
enforcement cases against crypto firms.
While notable, the big fish that the crypto industry is waiting
for is the crypto regulatory framework and stablecoin bills
circulating in Congress, which would give the industry the
guardrails it claims it needs to thrive.
On March 13, the Senate Banking Committee
approved the
GENIUS Act, the stablecoin bill, putting it one step closer to a
vote on the Senate floor.
The crypto framework bill, FIT 21, was first introduced in the
2024 legislative session, ultimately failing in the Senate.
However, in February, House Financial Services Committee Chair
French Hill said that he anticipated
the bill could pass in this session with “modest changes.”
But even if FIT 21 were passed soon, regulations for DeFi could
be far off. The bill would exclude DeFi
from SEC and CFTC oversight, but it would also establish a working
group to research 12 key areas related to DeFi.
This study will seek to understand the risks and benefits of
DeFi and will ultimately make regulatory recommendations.
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Continue reading Congress repealed the IRS broker
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Congress repealed the IRS broker rule, but can it
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