The Good Tech Companies - Educational Byte: What is KYC and How Does It Relate to Cryptocurrencies?
Episode Date: January 28, 2025This story was originally published on HackerNoon at: https://hackernoon.com/educational-byte-what-is-kyc-and-how-does-it-relate-to-cryptocurrencies. Know Your Customer ...or Client (KYC) is a process you've probably already gone through without even thinking it had a specific name. And it's in crypto, too. Check more stories related to finance at: https://hackernoon.com/c/finance. You can also check exclusive content about #kyc, #kyc-compliance, #what-is-kyc, #kyc-and-cryptocurrency, #crypto-exchanges, #crypto-regulation, #obyte, #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. Know Your Customer or Client (KYC) is a set of techniques used by businesses to verify the identity of their customers. It ensures that the person using a service is who they claim to be, reducing risks like fraud, money laundering, and illegal activities. KYC is particularly important in industries like banking and finance, where trust and security are essential.
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Educational Byte. What is KYC and how does it relate to cryptocurrencies?
By Obite, know your customer or client, KYC, is a process you've probably already gone through
without even thinking it had a specific name. Basically, it's the set of techniques used by
businesses to verify the identity of their customers. It ensures that the person using a service is who they claim to be,
reducing risks like fraud, money laundering, and illegal activities.
KYC is particularly important in industries like banking and finance,
where trust and security are essential. By collecting and verifying customer information,
companies can comply with legal regulations and maintain a safe environment for their services. KYC methods typically involve collecting personal information
such as a customer's name, date of birth, address, and government-issued identification
e.g. passport or driver's license. Many companies use online verification systems where customers
upload photos of their ID and a selfie for comparison.
Others may request physical copies or in-person verification. Advanced methods like biometric
scans and AI-based tools are also becoming common to streamline the process and enhance security.
In other words, KYC is the way regulations reach the common financial user, who must identify
themselves in order to use these services.
And yes, it could apply to cryptocurrencies, depending on what you're doing.
Why KYC at all? The short answer to his question is that people launder money and commit other financial crimes all the time. The United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime estimates that globally,
between 2% and 5% of GDP is laundered annually, amounting to approximately
€715 billion to €1.87 trillion. By verifying customer identities, financial institutions can
detect and deter illicit activities, ensuring the integrity of the financial system.
Implementing KYC procedures helps mitigate these substantial risks.
Helps mitigate is a key part here, though.
KYC is a technique among others, and it's not perfect. These regulations are enforced worldwide,
with each country tailoring its approach to meet international standards set by organizations like
the Financial Action Task Force, FATF. However, criminals continuously adapt to the rules and
find ways to bend them.
They use advanced methods like creating complex networks of shell companies or falsifying documents to obscure their dubious transactions.
Other KYC Issues Besides the above,
not all countries enforce KYC and anti-money laundering, AML, regulations equally.
And even in countries with strict KYC laws, enforcement can be inconsistent.
The sheer scale of global financial transactions makes IT challenging for KYC systems to catch
every suspicious activity. Financial institutions process billions of transactions daily,
and even with automation, some illegal activities could slip through.
Now, try to imagine the illegal percentage without KYC.
That's why we have to identify ourselves to use financial services. However, this identification
process can be a burden for people who aren't committing crimes, and not only because they
have to show their ids. It's because of how their IDs and personal data are stored and used by
companies. They could misuse or sell this data to third parties for different purposes,
including aggressive marketing that nobody asked for. Not to mention Thothikers could
breach their systems, steal everything, and resell it on the dark net. The larger the company,
the larger the prize to hackers. We could say KYC is a necessary evil, but decentralizing our
information and funds seems to be a better option.
KYC in the crypto world, you could be thinking that the point of crypto is kind of to be anonymous, or at least, more private and without limiting requirements.
Cryptocurrency was created to be inclusive and free. Free from governments, free from banks,
free from red tape. It still could be, free from most old things, but centralized companies aren't the
same. They must comply with regulations to keep operating, and that includes KYC. So, naturally,
companies like crypto exchanges, crypto funds, crypto investment intermediaries, custodial
wallets, and so on, will apply KYC in most cases. And when you sign up for a regulated crypto exchange, for example,
they might ask for your name, address, and a copy of your ID. Just like a bank would.
This, of course, eliminates some of the freedom that crypto provides,
so the crypto community has mixed feelings about KYC. On one hand, it builds trust and
opens doors for broader adoption by aligning with government regulations. On the other hand, it builds trust and opens doors for broader adoption by aligning with government regulations.
On the other hand, it challenges the privacy-focused nature of the crypto world.
Despite the debate, most major exchanges, like Binance and Coinbase, have embraced KYC to stay
compliant, and if you want to use their services, you'll have to identify yourself. Now, there's
still a way to avoid KYC. Transact in a fully peer-to-peer, P2P,
manner, without intermediaries. That could be risky, though. The other party involved could
scam you, so that's why we often prefer regulated intermediaries. In Obite, we're aiming to erase
intermediaries and go fully decentralized, so we developed conditional payments. These payments rely on smart contracts
and an arbiter, optionally, that lock funds until agreed conditions are met. For instance,
you exchange tokens only when both parties fulfill their parts of the deal, ensuring security and
trust without needing middlemen or complex verification processes. Ready to try it?
Conditional payments and contracts with arbitration are built-in in
the Obite wallet, which is available to everyone. Featured vector image by Red Greystock.
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