U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Paul Atkins cautioned that blockchain technology could enable excessive government surveillance of financial activities. Speaking at a roundtable on privacy and surveillance, he urged policies to protect investor privacy while ensuring illicit finance protections. Atkins emphasized balancing innovation with civil liberties in the crypto sector.
On Monday, the SEC hosted its sixth crypto-related roundtable of the year at its Washington headquarters, focusing on privacy and surveillance in digital assets. Chairman Paul Atkins highlighted the dual nature of blockchain technology, which drives crypto innovation but also tempts governments toward mass surveillance.
"It's no great leap to imagine a steady migration toward a future where the government in a constellation of intermediaries can peer into almost every dimension of the individual's financial lives," Atkins said. He criticized regulators' data hunger as incompatible with American freedoms, referencing the agency's consolidated audit trail (CAT) and post-2008 reporting rules that have expanded surveillance.
"Unfortunately, the federal government's insatiable desire for data has expanded these tools in ways that increasingly put the liberty of American investors at risk," he added. Atkins described blockchain as potentially the "most powerful financial surveillance architecture" in history and called for policies shielding lawful transactions from bulk surveillance.
Under Atkins, the SEC is advancing "Project Crypto," including defining crypto securities, tokenization standards, and an innovation exemption for new products. He advocates close collaboration with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission for seamless oversight, noting most digital assets fall outside SEC jurisdiction as non-securities.
The agency has shifted from prior legal battles, such as those involving privacy tools like Tornado Cash, with Trump appointees protecting software developers. SEC Commissioner Hester Peirce reinforced this, stating, "the government should avoid imposing regulatory obligations, including Bank Secrecy Act obligations on a software developer who does not have custody of users assets with the ability to override users choices."
Atkins warned against overreach as crypto rules develop: "If the instinct of the government is to treat every wallet like a broker, every piece of software as an exchange, every transaction as a reportable event, and every protocol as a convenient surveillance node, then the government will transform this ecosystem into a financial panopticon."