Circle plans reversibility for USDC stablecoin transactions: should we be worried?
As an industry that's been built on the concepts of immutability, it is worrisome to have ideas like this get explored, but then, this is something any of us could have expected to eventually play out, especially now that institutions are interested in making significant investments into the market, that commitment generally requires the incentive of control.
The USDC stablecoin is a centralized crypto token whose value is pegged to the United States dollar; several layers or elements of centralized control are a part of the design here.
Circle, the world’s second-largest stablecoin issuer, is reportedly examining reversible transactions to help recover funds from fraud and hacks, which appears to counter one of crypto’s founding principles: That transactions are final and beyond centralized control.
Circle president Heath Tarbert told the Financial Times on Thursday that the company is examining mechanisms that could allow transactions to be rolled back in cases of fraud or hacks, while still maintaining settlement finality.
We are thinking through [. . .] whether or not there’s the possibility of reversibility of transactions, right, but at the same time, we want settlement finality,” Tarbert told the FT. “So there’s an inherent tension there between being able to transfer something immediately, but having it be irrevocable [...]. – Cointelegraph report
If it wasn't already obvious, we can't have settlement finality and still have reversibility and on top of that, aim to use that reversibility to fight crime, because that requires swift reactions to thefts and how can we achieve that and still afford fast transactions with settlement finality?
That statement seems more like a line added in the overall message to soften the reality which is that USDC transactions will become reversible at some point. Considering that Circle is building its own layer 1 blockchain (Arc) where USDC will be the gas token, this isn't surprising at all.
Fact is, most centralized stablecoins will want this level of control, and contrary to what the report above may suggest and what I expect some to think, when it comes to reversibility of transactions, these businesses will not be looking for solutions that involves decentralized consensus because that cannot be efficient and doesn't afford them the control they desire.
Over the years, some of us have pointed out that traditional finance flaws aren't exactly “problems” as most have often viewed it but actually deliberate features that are designed that way to serve a purpose. The slow transactions, the high fees, the KYCs, the depressing efforts required to resolve issues, the limitations in international payments, all of it are by design and expecting that much of it will not be introduced to the blockchain layer as TradFi migrate and integrate is being delusional.
This is more reason why we ought to not forget what this technology is about and actively advocate and invest in decentralized solutions. Stablecoins are great, but we need them to be decentralized!
Exchanges have to be decentralized. Social platforms have to be decentralized! AI has to be decentralized! It all has to come to a layer and design that doesn't enable centralization because crypto is about freedom first!
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I have always been worried and everyone else should be too. No matter what, the centralized moneymakers have you trapped.