The post Supreme Court Opened Crypto Wallets To Surveillance appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Opinion by: Vikrant Sharma, CEO of Cake Labs When the United States Supreme Court refused to hear Harper v. Faulkender on June 30, 2025, the court essentially endorsed the Internal Revenue Service’s sweeping “John Doe” summonses for cryptocurrency records. By letting a lower court ruling stand, the court confirmed that the century-old third-party doctrine stands for public ledgers just as it does for bank statements. Under the third-party doctrine, information voluntarily shared with another party, like a bank or blockchain, is no longer protected by the Fourth Amendment. When data leaves a person’s direct control, constitutional privacy protections vanish. For onchain transactions, whether permanently etched into any blockchain network, virtually every payment is now fair game for warrant-free scrutiny. Prosecutors, tax agents and, by extension, any adversary with the time to sift through open data can now peruse at their leisure anyone’s financial information. Analytics profiteers weaponize “radical transparency” No entity has cashed in faster than blockchain forensics vendors. The global analytics market is projected to hit $41 billion this year, nearly double 2024’s total. Their clustering heuristics already flag over 60% of illicit stablecoin transfers, which — on the surface — is a remarkable statistic, but it also demonstrates how little pseudonymity remains. The pitch to regulators becomes irresistible: “Pay us, and every wallet becomes a glass bank.”  Yet the same dragnet slurps up innocent data into eternal spreadsheets bursting at the seams with payroll, medical care and political tithe data.  That data becomes constantly ripe for leaks or subpoenas. Congress will not ride to the rescue. Only cryptographic engineering can close the breach until lawmakers reinvent privacy for the digital century.  Some Bitcoin privacy methods let you publish a static receiving identifier while generating distinct, unlinkable onchain outputs that frustrate common analytical heuristics. Related: US Supreme Court will… The post Supreme Court Opened Crypto Wallets To Surveillance appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Opinion by: Vikrant Sharma, CEO of Cake Labs When the United States Supreme Court refused to hear Harper v. Faulkender on June 30, 2025, the court essentially endorsed the Internal Revenue Service’s sweeping “John Doe” summonses for cryptocurrency records. By letting a lower court ruling stand, the court confirmed that the century-old third-party doctrine stands for public ledgers just as it does for bank statements. Under the third-party doctrine, information voluntarily shared with another party, like a bank or blockchain, is no longer protected by the Fourth Amendment. When data leaves a person’s direct control, constitutional privacy protections vanish. For onchain transactions, whether permanently etched into any blockchain network, virtually every payment is now fair game for warrant-free scrutiny. Prosecutors, tax agents and, by extension, any adversary with the time to sift through open data can now peruse at their leisure anyone’s financial information. Analytics profiteers weaponize “radical transparency” No entity has cashed in faster than blockchain forensics vendors. The global analytics market is projected to hit $41 billion this year, nearly double 2024’s total. Their clustering heuristics already flag over 60% of illicit stablecoin transfers, which — on the surface — is a remarkable statistic, but it also demonstrates how little pseudonymity remains. The pitch to regulators becomes irresistible: “Pay us, and every wallet becomes a glass bank.”  Yet the same dragnet slurps up innocent data into eternal spreadsheets bursting at the seams with payroll, medical care and political tithe data.  That data becomes constantly ripe for leaks or subpoenas. Congress will not ride to the rescue. Only cryptographic engineering can close the breach until lawmakers reinvent privacy for the digital century.  Some Bitcoin privacy methods let you publish a static receiving identifier while generating distinct, unlinkable onchain outputs that frustrate common analytical heuristics. Related: US Supreme Court will…

Supreme Court Opened Crypto Wallets To Surveillance

For feedback or concerns regarding this content, please contact us at [email protected]

Opinion by: Vikrant Sharma, CEO of Cake Labs

When the United States Supreme Court refused to hear Harper v. Faulkender on June 30, 2025, the court essentially endorsed the Internal Revenue Service’s sweeping “John Doe” summonses for cryptocurrency records.

By letting a lower court ruling stand, the court confirmed that the century-old third-party doctrine stands for public ledgers just as it does for bank statements. Under the third-party doctrine, information voluntarily shared with another party, like a bank or blockchain, is no longer protected by the Fourth Amendment. When data leaves a person’s direct control, constitutional privacy protections vanish.

For onchain transactions, whether permanently etched into any blockchain network, virtually every payment is now fair game for warrant-free scrutiny. Prosecutors, tax agents and, by extension, any adversary with the time to sift through open data can now peruse at their leisure anyone’s financial information.

Analytics profiteers weaponize “radical transparency”

No entity has cashed in faster than blockchain forensics vendors. The global analytics market is projected to hit $41 billion this year, nearly double 2024’s total. Their clustering heuristics already flag over 60% of illicit stablecoin transfers, which — on the surface — is a remarkable statistic, but it also demonstrates how little pseudonymity remains.

The pitch to regulators becomes irresistible: “Pay us, and every wallet becomes a glass bank.” 

Yet the same dragnet slurps up innocent data into eternal spreadsheets bursting at the seams with payroll, medical care and political tithe data. 

That data becomes constantly ripe for leaks or subpoenas. Congress will not ride to the rescue. Only cryptographic engineering can close the breach until lawmakers reinvent privacy for the digital century. 

Some Bitcoin privacy methods let you publish a static receiving identifier while generating distinct, unlinkable onchain outputs that frustrate common analytical heuristics.

Related: US Supreme Court will not review IRS case involving Coinbase user data

Other approaches coordinate inputs from multiple parties in a way that blurs the usual “sender vs. change” patterns analysts look for.

Because these methods avoid custodial mixing pools, applying sanctions levied against Tornado Cash in 2022 is less straightforward.

If wallets and payment services enabled such protections by default, rather than burying them as opt-ins, baseline privacy could become more widely available as encrypted web connections gradually became standard.

Ignore privacy, suffer market fallout

Investors tend to ignore the warning signs until it’s too late, and dismissing protocol-level privacy will have harsh consequences. Emarketer projects consumer payment adoption to surge 82% from 2024 to 2026, but the overlooked fact in that report is that only 2.6% of Americans are expected to pay with crypto by 2026.

Mass uptake remains hostage to perceptions of security and confidentiality, and if coffee shop clerks can link tips to home addresses, mainstream wallets will stall. While that reality sends morality chills down the spines of consumers, institutional allocators look down at the compliance minefields they face.

Under the court’s reading, portfolio managers who custody onchain must assume continuous regulator visibility into strategies and counterparties. Funds transacting via privacy-enhanced rails will enjoy a cloak of trade secrecy unavailable to rivals who ignore the already available toolings.

Silence is complicity

History suggests that markets reward early movers who cement civil liberty safeguards into the infrastructure that holds them up. For example, email encryption was once a niche, but now it is the standard for enterprise software-as-a-service. 

The same arc can unfold for blockchain if developers, custodians and layer-2 networks elevate privacy from just a feature to table stakes. Failure to act now will leave the ecosystem dependent on fickle judicial moods and ever-shifting stability. 

The Supreme Court has shown the world where it stands; the burden now shifts to engineers building meaningful and purpose-driven privacy tools. 

Either blockchains evolve to protect users by default, or the dream of decentralized finance becomes a fantasy that ossifies into the most transparent and surveilled payment system ever created.

Opinion by: Vikrant Sharma, CEO of Cake Labs.

This article is for general information purposes and is not intended to be and should not be taken as legal or investment advice. The views, thoughts, and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

Source: https://cointelegraph.com/news/privacy-must-go-onchain?utm_source=rss_feed&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss_partner_inbound

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