A provision added to Kentucky’s crypto ATM bill has triggered massive criticism from digital rights advocates, who say it could make self-custody hardware wallets unworkable by requiring manufacturers to help users recover lost access credentials.
The disputed language appears in Section 33 of HB380, a 77-page bill passed unanimously in the Kentucky House on March 13.
It basically says hardware wallet providers must offer, and get ready for it, a way to reset a password, PIN, seed phrase or similar access information, and even assist wallet owners with that process after verifying their identity.
But then, critics say that clashes with how non-custodial hardware wallets are built, because these devices are designed so the manufacturer does not know or store a user’s seed phrase (which means there is nothing to recover).
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Bitcoin Policy Institute managing director Conner Brown said the measure would amount to a ban on self-custody in practice. The group argued that compliance would require either a backdoor that weakens security for all users or a withdrawal from the Kentucky market.
That position also appears to conflict with Kentucky’s own recent crypto policy. In March 2025, the state enacted HB701, which protects the right of residents to hold digital assets in self-hosted wallets and retain independent control of private keys. A manufacturer recovery requirement would cut against that principle.
Supporters of the bill have focused on crypto ATM fraud as HB380 would license ATM operators, cap daily transactions at US$2,000 (AU$2,800) and impose waiting periods for first-time users.
At the federal level, the amendment also appears out of step with recent statements supporting self-custody, including Executive Order 14178 and comments from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Chair Paul Atkins and Commissioner Hester Peirce.
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The post Kentucky Crypto Bill Sparks Backlash Over “Backdoor” Wallet Provision appeared first on Crypto News Australia.


