The post Crypto’s Crosschain Future Depends On Regulatory Readiness appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Opinion by: Temujin Louie, CEO of Wanchain Institutional capital is not crossing the bridge — it’s waiting for the compliance gatekeeper. While crosschain transactions promised a seamless, borderless crypto economy, regulatory walls are rising on every chain.  Emerging standards like Markets in Crypto Assets (MiCA) in Europe and the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) Travel Rule are no longer optional hurdles. They define who survives in the race for global liquidity.  With increasing interest in cryptocurrencies, compliance is becoming a more significant differentiator than technology. AML blind spots persist — bridges are still a favorite tool for laundering The blind spot in crosschain transactions is Anti-Money Laundering (AML) monitoring. Crypto mixers, DEXs, coin swap services and bridges have processed billions in illicit flows, with recent forensic reports tying more than $21.8 billion in laundered assets to these tools. When funds move from Ethereum to Solana through a decentralized bridge, legacy AML analytics lose their trail.  Source: Elliptic Report – State of Cross-chain Crime in 2025 The architecture of many bridges enables the potential obfuscation of wallet provenance, undermining transaction tracking across networks. Centralized exchanges face mounting pressure to implement crosschain surveillance, but bridges remain a favorite tool for hackers and money launderers — with law enforcement struggling to keep up. Legacy AML tools are not designed for decentralized bridges Legacy AML tooling is not keeping pace with decentralized bridge innovation. Most legacy compliance solutions were intended for exchanges and custodians with clear KYC endpoints. Decentralized bridge protocols often lack counterparty identification, making Travel Rule implementation an open challenge.  While AI-powered analytics and smart contract plugins now auto-flag wallet clusters and suspicious movements in near real-time, these tools still rely on centralized data collection standards, like IVMS 101, which presumes a regulated intermediary on every hop. This is directly at odds… The post Crypto’s Crosschain Future Depends On Regulatory Readiness appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Opinion by: Temujin Louie, CEO of Wanchain Institutional capital is not crossing the bridge — it’s waiting for the compliance gatekeeper. While crosschain transactions promised a seamless, borderless crypto economy, regulatory walls are rising on every chain.  Emerging standards like Markets in Crypto Assets (MiCA) in Europe and the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) Travel Rule are no longer optional hurdles. They define who survives in the race for global liquidity.  With increasing interest in cryptocurrencies, compliance is becoming a more significant differentiator than technology. AML blind spots persist — bridges are still a favorite tool for laundering The blind spot in crosschain transactions is Anti-Money Laundering (AML) monitoring. Crypto mixers, DEXs, coin swap services and bridges have processed billions in illicit flows, with recent forensic reports tying more than $21.8 billion in laundered assets to these tools. When funds move from Ethereum to Solana through a decentralized bridge, legacy AML analytics lose their trail.  Source: Elliptic Report – State of Cross-chain Crime in 2025 The architecture of many bridges enables the potential obfuscation of wallet provenance, undermining transaction tracking across networks. Centralized exchanges face mounting pressure to implement crosschain surveillance, but bridges remain a favorite tool for hackers and money launderers — with law enforcement struggling to keep up. Legacy AML tools are not designed for decentralized bridges Legacy AML tooling is not keeping pace with decentralized bridge innovation. Most legacy compliance solutions were intended for exchanges and custodians with clear KYC endpoints. Decentralized bridge protocols often lack counterparty identification, making Travel Rule implementation an open challenge.  While AI-powered analytics and smart contract plugins now auto-flag wallet clusters and suspicious movements in near real-time, these tools still rely on centralized data collection standards, like IVMS 101, which presumes a regulated intermediary on every hop. This is directly at odds…

Crypto’s Crosschain Future Depends On Regulatory Readiness

For feedback or concerns regarding this content, please contact us at crypto.news@mexc.com

Opinion by: Temujin Louie, CEO of Wanchain

Institutional capital is not crossing the bridge — it’s waiting for the compliance gatekeeper. While crosschain transactions promised a seamless, borderless crypto economy, regulatory walls are rising on every chain. 

Emerging standards like Markets in Crypto Assets (MiCA) in Europe and the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) Travel Rule are no longer optional hurdles. They define who survives in the race for global liquidity. 

With increasing interest in cryptocurrencies, compliance is becoming a more significant differentiator than technology.

AML blind spots persist — bridges are still a favorite tool for laundering

The blind spot in crosschain transactions is Anti-Money Laundering (AML) monitoring. Crypto mixers, DEXs, coin swap services and bridges have processed billions in illicit flows, with recent forensic reports tying more than $21.8 billion in laundered assets to these tools. When funds move from Ethereum to Solana through a decentralized bridge, legacy AML analytics lose their trail. 

Source: Elliptic Report – State of Cross-chain Crime in 2025

The architecture of many bridges enables the potential obfuscation of wallet provenance, undermining transaction tracking across networks. Centralized exchanges face mounting pressure to implement crosschain surveillance, but bridges remain a favorite tool for hackers and money launderers — with law enforcement struggling to keep up.

Legacy AML tools are not designed for decentralized bridges

Legacy AML tooling is not keeping pace with decentralized bridge innovation. Most legacy compliance solutions were intended for exchanges and custodians with clear KYC endpoints. Decentralized bridge protocols often lack counterparty identification, making Travel Rule implementation an open challenge. 

While AI-powered analytics and smart contract plugins now auto-flag wallet clusters and suspicious movements in near real-time, these tools still rely on centralized data collection standards, like IVMS 101, which presumes a regulated intermediary on every hop. This is directly at odds with the permissionless nature of bridges and decentralized protocols, often leaving a compliance void between networks.

Crosschain transactions reveal Travel Rule and jurisdictional contradictions

Crosschain transactions expose profound complications when executing the Travel Rule. Global regulators require crypto service providers to include originator and beneficiary details in transfers over threshold amounts — but bridges and DEX swaps lack the compliance logic, due to their decentralized nature, to surface this data. 

European MiCA regulations bring uniform standards, but only for registered VASPs and authorized platforms. Outside this, they don’t have a way to keep track of global transactions. In the US, the recent Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) penalties underscore an appetite for strict enforcement — digital banks now face fines of over $200 million for AML lapses, if they don’t comply. 

The UK regime aims to widen oversight beyond registration, making the AML lens much broader for DeFi.

Each jurisdiction has its own rules and systems for AML monitoring, making it challenging to keep track of global transactions that occur via crosschain flows in bridges. We need solutions to service permissionless, decentralized systems that comply with international regulations. The crypto analytics services have a significant business opportunity if they adapt their tools to work seamlessly with decentralized systems.

We need better AML tooling for bridges to get a DeFi-compliant

AML-compliant bridges are needed for regulated DeFi to be viable for mainstream use. A handful of projects are already integrating AML tooling to comply with most jurisdictions. Still, unfortunately, AML tooling that doesn’t demand decentralized protocols to sacrifice their decentralization ethos has yet to emerge in any significant way. DeFi systems will be kept far away from institutions without this kind of infrastructure. 

Related: New BIS plan could make ‘dirty’ crypto harder to cash out

Even so, institutional players are piloting regulated crosschain settlements with privacy and compliance baked in. Mass institutional adoption will, however, stall until bridges are refitted with services that can embed Travel Rule logic. The opportunity is for startups to create compliance services into protocol design — those who do will seize market share as rules tighten.

The urgency of self-regulation

There is a shrinking window for decentralized protocols to self-regulate and develop proactive compliance infrastructure before regulators mandate closed standards. Some will see this as an existential threat to permissionless innovation — but compliance is emerging as the only passport to global scale and sustainable partnerships. 

What may be controversial to permissionless purists is that crosschain compliance isn’t just a regulatory burden — it’s a business imperative. The institutions waiting on the sidelines may soon dictate the terms of adoption: compliance or exclusion.

Some will object that prioritizing AML rules and regulatory mandates undermines crypto’s permissionless spirit. Others will argue that the anti-privacy implications of Travel Rule compliance make every bridge a weak link for surveillance. Still, market reality is shifting — jurisdictions’ writing rules are paving the way for institutional capital

Ignoring crosschain compliance is not just risky — it is a market disadvantage. The winners in this space will treat compliance not as a checkbox but as a design principle. This is how DeFi evolves — and how institutional capital finally crosses the bridge.

Opinion by: Temujin Louie, CEO of Wanchain.

This article is for general information purposes and is not intended to be and should not be taken as legal or investment advice. The views, thoughts, and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

Source: https://cointelegraph.com/news/crypto-crosschain-regulation?utm_source=rss_feed&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss_partner_inbound

Market Opportunity
NEAR Logo
NEAR Price(NEAR)
$1.3364
$1.3364$1.3364
+2.25%
USD
NEAR (NEAR) Live Price Chart
Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact crypto.news@mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

MAGA insiders suddenly embrace 'indispensable' energy they long derided as a 'parasite'

MAGA insiders suddenly embrace 'indispensable' energy they long derided as a 'parasite'

President Donald Trump spent much of his first year in office in an all-out war against solar power, even going so far as to change regulations so that renewable
Share
Rawstory2026/03/03 05:09
How to earn from cloud mining: IeByte’s upgraded auto-cloud mining platform unlocks genuine passive earnings

How to earn from cloud mining: IeByte’s upgraded auto-cloud mining platform unlocks genuine passive earnings

The post How to earn from cloud mining: IeByte’s upgraded auto-cloud mining platform unlocks genuine passive earnings appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. contributor Posted: September 17, 2025 As digital assets continue to reshape global finance, cloud mining has become one of the most effective ways for investors to generate stable passive income. Addressing the growing demand for simplicity, security, and profitability, IeByte has officially upgraded its fully automated cloud mining platform, empowering both beginners and experienced investors to earn Bitcoin, Dogecoin, and other mainstream cryptocurrencies without the need for hardware or technical expertise. Why cloud mining in 2025? Traditional crypto mining requires expensive hardware, high electricity costs, and constant maintenance. In 2025, with blockchain networks becoming more competitive, these barriers have grown even higher. Cloud mining solves this by allowing users to lease professional mining power remotely, eliminating the upfront costs and complexity. IeByte stands at the forefront of this transformation, offering investors a transparent and seamless path to daily earnings. IeByte’s upgraded auto-cloud mining platform With its latest upgrade, IeByte introduces: Full Automation: Mining contracts can be activated in just one click, with all processes handled by IeByte’s servers. Enhanced Security: Bank-grade encryption, cold wallets, and real-time monitoring protect every transaction. Scalable Options: From starter packages to high-level investment contracts, investors can choose the plan that matches their goals. Global Reach: Already trusted by users in over 100 countries. Mining contracts for 2025 IeByte offers a wide range of contracts tailored for every investor level. From entry-level plans with daily returns to premium high-yield packages, the platform ensures maximum accessibility. Contract Type Duration Price Daily Reward Total Earnings (Principal + Profit) Starter Contract 1 Day $200 $6 $200 + $6 + $10 bonus Bronze Basic Contract 2 Days $500 $13.5 $500 + $27 Bronze Basic Contract 3 Days $1,200 $36 $1,200 + $108 Silver Advanced Contract 1 Day $5,000 $175 $5,000 + $175 Silver Advanced Contract 2 Days $8,000 $320 $8,000 + $640 Silver…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/17 23:48
Supreme Court Declines AI Copyright Case, Extending Legal Setback for AI-Generated Works

Supreme Court Declines AI Copyright Case, Extending Legal Setback for AI-Generated Works

The post Supreme Court Declines AI Copyright Case, Extending Legal Setback for AI-Generated Works appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. In brief The U.S. Supreme
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2026/03/03 05:26