Key Takeaways:
That tension has been growing for months, and SEC commissioner Hester Peirce has now stepped directly into the debate by defending the right to keep digital assets under personal control.
Peirce didn’t approach the topic as a bureaucrat. She approached it as someone concerned that a core freedom is slipping away. On The Rollup podcast, she argued that a financial system built on individual liberty should never pressure people into using intermediaries just to store their money. She framed self-custody not as a technological preference, but as a human right.
Alongside self-ownership of assets, Peirce warned that privacy in online payments has been increasingly treated as something suspicious. That mindset, she said, flips the presumption of innocence upside down — and risks turning normal financial discretion into a red flag. For her, privacy is not the exception. It is the standard that should be protected.
While the industry wrestles with identity, Washington is moving slowly. The Digital Asset Market Structure Clarity Act — the bill meant to address self-custody protections, AML rules, and asset classification — will not move forward until 2026. Until then, the legal framework around crypto ownership remains unresolved.
Ironically, the custody debate isn’t being driven by regulators alone. It is also being driven by Bitcoin holders themselves.
For the first time since Bitcoin’s creation, the amount of BTC held in private wallets is shrinking. ETFs have opened a door that many large investors and long-term holders are now walking through. The turning point was the SEC’s approval of in-kind redemptions, which allow ETF participants to move Bitcoin into and out of funds without triggering taxes — a game-changer for people managing large allocations.
This convenience has already convinced prominent voices to adopt ETFs over self-custody. PlanB, one of Bitcoin’s most widely followed analysts, publicly moved his holdings into ETFs earlier this year, citing the burden of key management. The reaction across the Bitcoin community was swift — some saw it as practical, others saw it as a betrayal of Bitcoin’s founding ideals.
Peirce’s advocacy lands in the middle of an ideological divide: one version of Bitcoin is evolving toward regulated, mainstream investment rails, while the other remains anchored in the cypherpunk principle of personal control above all else.
Her warning wasn’t about technology. It was about identity. If the industry forgets why Bitcoin existed in the first place, she suggested, adoption may grow — but freedom may shrink.
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