The Good Tech Companies - Educational Byte: Centralized Vs. Decentralized Coins – or Your USDT Can Be Frozen

Episode Date: July 21, 2025

This story was originally published on HackerNoon at: https://hackernoon.com/educational-byte-centralized-vs-decentralized-coins-or-your-usdt-can-be-frozen. If you’re ...holding something like USDT or USDC, your coins can be stopped in their tracks. So, let’s explore what you need to check about your coins. Check more stories related to web3 at: https://hackernoon.com/c/web3. You can also check exclusive content about #decentralization, #centralization, #stablecoins, #blockchain-censorship, #private-keys, #obyte, #usdt-or-usdc, #good-company, and more. This story was written by: @obyte. Learn more about this writer by checking @obyte's about page, and for more stories, please visit hackernoon.com. Some coins are built in a way that allows companies or even governments to freeze or seize your funds. Centralized coins rely on smart contracts or systems that can be modified by the issuer. Decentralized coins are the ones that align with the original vision of crypto: no middlemen, no single point of failure.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 This audio is presented by Hacker Noon, where anyone can learn anything about any technology. Educational byte. Centralized versus decentralized coins, or your USDT can be frozen, by obyte. Did you know that not all, crypto, is created equal? A lot of people assume that once they buy a cryptocurrency, it's theirs, safe from interference. But here's the catch. Some coins are built in a way that allows companies or even governments to freeze or seize your funds, no matter how strong your password or wallet security is. If you're holding something like Tether, USDT, or USD Coin, USDC, your coins can be stopped in their tracks. So, let's break down what it actually means for a coin to be
Starting point is 00:00:43 centralized or decentralized, and why this distinction can affect your financial freedom. What does, centralized, mean in crypto? In the crypto world, centralized coins are those controlled by a specific company or entity. That group can decide the rules and change them. For example, USDC is issued by Circle, and USDT is issued by Tether Limited. Both companies can't freeze any address holding their stablecoins if they choose, and they've
Starting point is 00:01:10 done it, millions have been frozen over the years. Centralized coins rely on smart contracts or systems that can be modified by the issuer, and they often do this to comply with law enforcement requests, fights cams, or freeze stolen funds. That may sound reasonable, but the problem is that they can also freeze your funds if they see fit, for any reason. And here's a twist. Sometimes even coins running on seemingly, decentralized, blockchains get censored.
Starting point is 00:01:37 A big example is Tornado Cash on Ethereum. Tornado Cash is a crypto mixer that lets users make anonymous transactions. After it was sanctioned by the US government in 2022, its related addresses were blacklisted, and major Ethereum validators started filtering or blocking transactions that interacted with it. If you thought Ethereum was supposed to be decentralized, well, not exactly. While Ethereum is permissionless in theory, it still depends on so-called validators to process transactions. These validators, many of whom are regulated companies or run by big players, can be pressured to block or censor transactions.
Starting point is 00:02:14 So yes, even on Ethereum, transactions can be blocked depending on what you're trying to do or the whims of certain governments. So just having a crypto wallet or using a blockchain doesn't guarantee freedom or control. You need to look under the hood and ask who's in charge of that coin or network. In this case, understanding the difference between centralized and decentralized coins isn't just tech jargon. It's about how much control you have. Decentralized coins in action. Now let's talk about decentralized coins. They're the ones that
Starting point is 00:02:46 really align with the original vision of crypto. No bosses, no middlemen, no single point of failure. When a coin is truly decentralized, no one can decide to freeze your funds. Not a company, not a government, not even the developers. That's because decentralized networks rely on code, not human approval. Talking about stablecoins like USDT and USDC, we can mention USDS from Sky, previously DAI from MakerDAO, as a more decentralized alternative. It's still based on Ethereum, but there's no company controlling it. A decentralized autonomous organization, DAO, formed by its community members is what holds
Starting point is 00:03:24 a certain degree of control through on-chain governance. The latter system assures that token holders are always involved in important decisions. Beyond stablecoins, one project that takes freedom seriously is obite. This is a whole, versatile crypto network that runs without miners, validators, or stakers. That means no one in the middle can censor transactions, freeze your funds, or rewrite the rules. Once you send something on obite, it's final. Thienetwork runs on a DAG, directed a cyclic graph, not a blockchain, which makes it censorship resistant by design. Not your keys? Another important point to consider is about private keys. There's some secret words provided by non-custodial wallets for the owner of the wallet, and the
Starting point is 00:04:07 only way to access and spend the funds in it. It's known that if you don't have these keys, you don't truly own the coins. Centralized crypto exchanges, for instance, don't provide these keys, just user accounts. But here's an important point. Just holding the private keys to your wallet might not be enough. Let's say you self-custody USDT on your hardware wallet. You have your seed phrase, private keys, so you supposedly have full control of your funds, but Tether Limited can still freeze your USDT. Why? Because USDT lives on a smart contract controlled by them, not you. They work, essentially, the same way as a bank.
Starting point is 00:04:45 So, to truly be in control, you need both. Controlling your private keys and using decentralized coins, where the network itself doesn't have middlemen, like companies or validators, that can override you. However, you don't need to swear off centralized coins entirely. They can be useful, especially for trading or accessing dollar-pegged value. But if you're serious about sovereignty and freedom, start learning how to manage your own keys and pick coins in networks that walk the talk on decentralization, like obit. Thank you for listening to this Hacker Noon story, read by Artificial Intelligence. Visit HackerNoon.com to read, write, learn and publish.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.