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The relative anonymity of digital currencies may make them especially susceptible to money
laundering and other criminal activities. The usefulness of a digital currency for such purposes will
depend on how much record-keeping the mechanism maintains about the transactions, how
involved third-party service providers are in the transactions, whether such third parties comply with
anti-money laundering requirements, and how easy it is to move digital currency across borders and
convert that currency into sovereign currency.
To meet AML/KYC requirements, banks serving bitcoin-related businesses need to do certain things,
such as look at the source and destination of funds, according to Jonathan Levin, co-founder of
Chainalysis. Companies need to know if money is coming from or going to sources they don't want
to do business with.
"Oftentimes fraud alerts will be triggered in other parts of the fraud detection process, and they will
be linked to some bad activity on the blockchain, and that will serve as a three-point strike
someone flipped their bank account a number of times, then you see a connection to a dark market
and you know that something bad is going on," Levin said. "It's not necessarily the only check you're
going to be able to do, but there is some expectation that financial intermediaries should be doing
source and destination of funds type analysis."
Banks need to be aware of what their customers are doing, though not necessarily what their
customers' customers are doing, he said.
"If I onboard someone like Western Union, I might know the volumes they put through, the
frequency, the velocity, so when wires come in that don't match that, I need to be talking to my
Western Union counterpart and understanding what happened there," he said. "Very similar stuff
happens for bitcoin money service businesses. Because you're stepping into potentially a high-risk
business, you would want to look at high-level metrics about what that company is doing." This is
where services like Chainalysis come in, to conduct that analysis and provide an overall
understanding of what the business is up to.
Even this kind of big-picture monitoring of the public ledger unsettles bitcoin's privacy-conscious
early adopters.
"The way I see it, if their business is viable, then our work is incomplete," Ranvier said. "As long as
Chainalysis has a viable business model, we know we have room for improvement."
Ranvier acknowledged that the bitcoin ledger is a public record. "Even if I were to say they don't
have the right to, that doesn't stop anyone from analyzing the blockchain," he said.
But if anyone can compromise bitcoin users' privacy, "we see that as a bug that should be fixed, and
we try to brainstorm ways to encourage software developers to close those bugs," Ranvier said.
Shortly after the terrorist attacks in Paris last month, several news outlets reported that the Islamic
State was using bitcoin wallets to store and manage millions of dollars' worth of the currency. No
proof was provided, however.
But even if evidence showed terrorists were using bitcoin, privacy stalwarts see other dangers from
government or private-sector snooping.
"Every technique that has a legitimate law enforcement use also has an illegitimate use for
organized crime or political repression of dissidents," Ranvier said. "This is very much a two-edged
sword. You could always come up with a scenario in which taking away privacy will cause a benefit
in a certain situation, but the conversation never seems to talk about all the ways that power can be
abused."
To former FDIC chairman William Isaac, the questions around how banks should handle KYC/AML
compliance in the bitcoin realm are part of a broader need to review compliance rules that affect
access to banking services.
"More and more people, companies, and countries are being denied access to the services of the
banking system particularly those with lower incomes who need it most," said Isaac, who is now
senior managing director and global head of financial services at FTI Consulting in Sarasota, Fla.
"What is the societal cost of this, what benefits flow from it, and are there less intrusive and more
efficient ways to get the information we are seeking? Are we driving the money underground were it
can't be tracked? Should we require greater protection by insisting on search warrants?"
No one should hold their breath waiting for bank regulations to change. Banks will have to tread
lightly and communicate with their regulators as well as the bitcoin and privacy communities as they
take their tentative first steps into bitcoin banking.
Penny Crosman is American Banker's editor at large. She welcomes feedback on her column
atpenny.crosman@sourcemedia.com.
http://www.americanbanker.com/news/bank-technology/can-you-really-know-a-customer-who-usesbitcoin-1078095-1.html