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U.S. Treasury Department's Shift in Attitude Could Bring New Opportunities to the Crypto Privacy Sector
Deep Tide TechFlow News, March 9th, reports that the U.S. Department of the Treasury, in its latest congressional report, for the first time acknowledges that privacy tools such as token mixers can serve legitimate financial privacy purposes. The language has significantly softened compared to previous statements, seen as a sign that the Trump administration’s regulatory stance on the crypto industry continues to loosen.
Nansen senior research analyst Jake Kennis pointed out that political tensions, tightening regulations, and the maturity of zero-knowledge (ZK) technology are collectively driving the privacy sector from a fringe speculative area toward mainstream institutional focus. Currently, capital is accelerating into compliant privacy projects like Railgun, Nocturne, Zama, Aleo, and Nillion, covering scenarios such as tokenization, payments, trade finance, and custody.
However, risks should not be overlooked: the Treasury report also disclosed that North Korean hackers laundered billions of dollars through mixers between 2024 and 2025; the EU plans to ban trading platforms from listing privacy coins like Zcash and Monero by 2027. Meanwhile, developers of privacy tools such as Tornado Cash and Samourai Wallet are facing legal prosecution in the US and Europe, with industry compliance pressures continuing to rise.