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Adam Todd, CEO at Digitex Futures Exchange, reveals that the exchange will completely take down all KYC as of April 2020 in response to earlier data leakage.
While some global cryptocurrency exchanges move to expand Know Your Customer (KYC) rules, some major rivals claim that crypto platforms donât need KYC at all.
Digitex, a Seychelles-based crypto derivatives exchange, will start removing KYC identification this week in response to a major user data leakage that happened last month.
Digitex will have no KYC identity requirements as of April 2020
Adam Todd, CEO at Digitex Futures Exchange, revealed the news in a public video statement on March 4, declaring that Digitex will have all KYC identification processes removed from its platform as of April 2020.
Digitex CEO clarified that the exchange will begin getting rid of KYC already this week, saying:
âAs of the end of this week, we're gonna remove all KYC identity verification from every part of our exchange. To buy Digitex tokens from our treasury, you will not need to do KYC. And when we go mainnet in April, there will be no KYC identity verification requirements of any kind to use our exchange.â
Specifically, the Digitex exchange is currently running in beta version, only allowing its users to buy its native token DGTX. After the mainnet will be launched on April 27, Digitex will allow users to freely trade between DGTX and Ether (ETH) as well as other cryptocurrencies, Todd elaborated to Cointelegraph, noting that the exchange will not offer support for any fiat currencies at any time.
According to Todd, KYC removal is the only way that he can guarantee that Digitex wonât have personal documents leaked ever again as the platform wonât have those personal documents at all.
Personal data of 8,000 Digitex users was stolen
KYC removal on Digitex comes on the heels of a major user data breach at the exchange, which eventually led to a compromise of some sensitive data. As Cointelegraph reported on Feb. 29, the leakage was exploited by an ex-employee of Digitex, who purportedly stole KYC documents such as passport and driving license scans of more than 8,000 Digitex customers.Â
According to some reports, the purported âDigileakerâ claimed that he is ânot an ex-employee or contractor or somebody else from Adam or Digitexâs past.â
In a public statement on March 2, Digitex explained that the exchange was initially only aware of the email data leakage. However, there was the second breach that eventually caused a compromise of sensitive data, the exchange admitted.
A Digitex spokesperson elaborated to Cointelegraph that at least five people have had their government-issued IDs like passport photos and national identity cards leaked. As the perpetrator claims to have 8,000 documents in his possession, Digitex has not yet been able to determine whether this is the case but is currently investigating it.
Big Brother is the only real reason for KYC, Digitex CEO argues
While Digitex previously hinted at the potential removal of KYC requirements, the firmâs CEO bashed the general concept of KYC in his new statement.
According to Todd, major justifications behind KYC rules like money laundering are âstupidâ and âridiculous,â while the only real reason for KYC is that âBig Brother wants to know that everybodyâs doing all the time.â He said:
âWe all know the real reason for KYC. The real reason for KYC is that Big Brother wants to know what everybodyâs doing all the time. He wants to know how much youâve got and what youâre doing with it. I donât believe they have the right to do that to everybody in the world.â
Digitex had been trying to adopt KYC because of two major reasons â combating money laundering and allowing United States-based customers onto the platform, the Digitex CEO explained. But none of those justifications are reasonable for Digitex now when its users have suffered a major breach of personal data, according to Todd.
Todd argued that users are not laundering cryptocurrencies like ETH into Digitex for funding international terrorism, declaring that such allegations are âobvious bullshit.â Speaking to Cointelegraph, Todd emphasized that money laundering with crypto accounts for a âtiny fraction of a percent of what is going on in fiat.â He elaborated:
âThereâs two trillion dollars worth of fiat currency laundered every year which is 10x the entire market cap of every crypto currency combined. Any money laundering that is going on with crypto is a tiny fraction of a percent of what is going on in fiat. Therefore by the same logic any business that takes cash without fully identifying their customer is also funding terrorism.If this person had an account at another crypto exchange like Binance, it would take 5 days to withdraw around $100k without noticing. That is for one account, if a terrorist wanted to launder even more, there is nothing easier than creating a new account.â
âForcing all of our customers throughout the world to prove theyâre not American is unreasonableâ
Regarding the question of the U.S. governmentâs unwillingness to let its citizens trade crypto on Digitex, the platform is already blocking U.S. IPs and asking users to confirm that they are not based in the U.S. in Digitexâs terms and conditions, the executive elaborated.
As such, the U.S. IP block combined with terms and conditions should be enough for a reasonable practice of stopping U.S. users, while strict KYC rules are apparently far more than actually needed, according to Digitex CEO. He said:
âI believe this is the reasonable way of stopping them. I donât believe that the U.S. authorities have the right to tell me that I must do KYC identity verification of every single person in the world that wants to use my platform just so that we can block US people. That is unreasonable. I donât think they have a legal President to make me do that and Iâm not gonna do it.â
Speaking to Cointelegraph, Todd said that in the event that their team manages to detect a U.S. user in violation of those terms and conditions, the exchange would immediately revoke access to the platform and give seven days to withdraw their funds.
When asked whether Digitex expects their user base to grow after the KYC removal, Todd said yes, noting that KYC is a massive impediment for many people to join crypto exchanges as lots of people over the globe donât have government-issued IDs at all. He continued:
âKYC is a huge barrier for many people and we expect Digitex to attract a lot more users by removing it. We also stand by our belief in peopleâs right to privacy [...] By opening up our exchange to the world population we hope to create a product that can make a difference in people's lives.â
The fact that Digitex is fighting oversight by Big Brother falls in line with increasing global concerns over user privacy. A number of major industry players urge the protection of user privacy online. As such, an executive at major blockchain and crypto analytics firm Chainalysis, which collaborates with major federal agencies like the Internal Revenue Service and the FBI, is confident that full transparency is not the ideal place for crypto.
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