The United States Treasury Department has acknowledged the legitimate use of crypto mixers, which are tools designed to obscure digital asset transfers to enhance user privacy. According to Cointelegraph, this recognition was detailed in the Treasury's report to Congress titled 'Innovative Technologies to Counter Illicit Finance Involving Digital Assets.' The report highlights that as consumers increasingly utilize digital assets for payments, they may opt for mixers to safeguard their privacy in spending habits. It further elaborates that lawful users of digital assets might employ mixers to ensure financial privacy when conducting transactions on public blockchains. This could include protecting sensitive information related to personal wealth, business transactions, or charitable donations from being exposed on a public ledger.
The Treasury's report also addresses the potential risks associated with 'darknet' or non-custodial, decentralized mixers. It warns that such mixers are often exploited for money laundering or transferring illicit funds by cybercriminals, including hackers linked to North Korea. The report suggests that custodial mixers, which are centralized services that hold user funds during the mixing process, could offer identifying information that might be used to trace users and transaction flows.
Privacy concerns in the crypto space have intensified, particularly in 2025, as financial surveillance grows and U.S. lawmakers push for know-your-customer (KYC) requirements on digital asset service providers and decentralized finance (DeFi) platforms. DeFi leaders and advocates have expressed alarm over the ambiguous language in the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act of 2025, known as the CLARITY bill, which could compel DeFi platforms to collect user identification information. Alexander Grieve, vice president of government affairs at crypto investment firm Paradigm, noted that the bill lacks adequate protections for open-source software developers in the U.S.
Former hedge fund manager Ray Dalio has also voiced concerns about the impending introduction of central bank digital currencies (CBDCs), which are on-chain fiat currencies managed by central banks or governments. In an interview with independent journalist Tucker Carlson, Dalio described CBDCs as a 'very effective controlling mechanism' for governments, posing a significant threat to digital privacy. The ongoing debate raises questions about the future of privacy in U.S. crypto policy, especially in light of recent legal actions such as Roman Storm's conviction.