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I saw a few summaries of the Market Structure Draft yesterday (#1410839) that seemed generally positive (protections for self-custody, protections for non-custodial app developers, protections for node-runners).

Today, we get The Rage's take, and it is a nice tempering force to the general politician positivity.

Of protections for non-custodial developersOf protections for non-custodial developers

This shaves a maximum of five years off of any potential charges, but continues to leave the door wide open to charge non-custodial developers with conspiracy to evade sanctions and conspiracy to commit money laundering if people use their software for illicit means – carrying up to 40 years in prison.

Of self-custody:Of self-custody:

Specifically, the draft states that “nothing in this section may be construed to limit the authority of the Secretary of the Treasury, the Commission, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, the Comptroller of the Currency, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, or the National Credit Union Administration to carry out any enforcement action or special measure authorized under applicable law, including the Bank Secrecy Act, section 9714 of the Combating Russian Money Laundering Act (3111 U.S.C. 5318A note), and section 7213A of the Fentanyl Sanctions Act (21 U.S.C. 2313a); or any other law relating to illicit finance, money laundering, terrorism financing, or United States sanctions.”

Of KYCing self-custody wallets:Of KYCing self-custody wallets:

The provision sounds eerily similar to the potential introduction of a FATF-style Travel Rule already in force in the EU and UK, in which crypto asset service providers must verify whether a customer sending money to a non-custodial wallet actually owns the address they are sending funds to.

Although The Rage notes:

The draft clarifies that the Treasury’s guidance for financial institutions shall “not require a regulated entity to collect, with respect to any transaction, personally identifiable information about the controller of a self-hosted wallet when the controller is not both the customer of the regulated entity and a party to such transaction, except as required by United States sanctions laws and regulations or lawful process.”

Of giving Treasury more authority via the Patriot Act:Of giving Treasury more authority via the Patriot Act:

The draft herein amends the PATRIOT Act's special measures to allow the Treasury to prohibit certain types of cryptocurrency transactions it deems a primary money laundering concern.

These could, for example, be transactions that involve coinjoins or payjoins, as the Treasury has already completed a public comment period on its so-called Mixer Rule, leaving only its enforcement as the next step. The Rage has repeatedly warned of the application of the PATRIOT Act to digital assets here and here.

L0la L33tz concludes:L0la L33tz concludes:

For the lack of Congressional protections for privacy software developers and users present in the current draft, it can be concluded that the Senate Banking Committee’s market structure proposal is not so much a document that will give non-custodial developers the protections and clarity they so urgently need, but rather functions as a piece of legislation that will continue to put non-custodial developers and users of privacy software at the will of the Government, leaving the door wide open to the full surveillance of all users of non-custodial software.
100 sats \ 1 reply \ @Scoresby OP 12h

Coinbase withdraws their support from the act:

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81 sats \ 7 replies \ @grayruby 14h

Is slop going to be the word of 2026? I am already done with it.

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It was already the word of 2025 so I'm guessing it can't be the word of the year a second time: https://www.merriam-webster.com/wordplay/word-of-the-year

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0 sats \ 1 reply \ @grayruby 11h

I had no idea. I thought it was a recent thing. Only been seeing it the last couple months.

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Really? I feel like people have been talking about slop on SN for quite a while

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40 sats \ 1 reply \ @Jer 9h

It can be the perfect word though.

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Too much of a good thing I guess.

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20 sats \ 0 replies \ @kepford 13h

Yeah... same here.

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for 2025 was "tradeoffs"

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102 sats \ 0 replies \ @035736735e 9h

The so-called protections for non-custodial developers are not real shields but sentencing reductions at best. The core issue remains that the door stays open for prosecution under conspiracy statutes. That means the mere possibility that your open-source code could be used for illicit activity is enough to bring down forty years of potential prison time.

The self-custody language looks harmless until you read the carve-outs and agency powers that are preserved. Every relevant regulatory body retains full authority to enforce an extensive list of statutes dealing with illicit finance and sanctions. That is not a narrowing of government power. That is a restatement that nothing here will impede it.

The KYC angle on self-hosted wallets is especially concerning. Even with the nuanced Treasury guidance language, the text still aligns with the global trend towards address verification. Once infrastructure is built to verify wallet ownership it rarely stops at the minimal use case. It expands over time and that is precisely how surveillance creep operates.

Amending the Patriot Act to give Treasury the explicit authority to prohibit specific crypto transaction types is a serious escalation. Mixers and privacy-enhancing transaction methods are already in the crosshairs. This sets up the infrastructure for broader prohibitions whenever political or enforcement priorities shift.

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