Coinbase will shut down staking service if regulators mandate censoring transactions

Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong said on August 17 that the firm would shut down its staking services if regulators wanted it to censor transactions as a validator.

According to Armstrong, in a hypothetical situation like that, the firm would have to focus on the bigger picture of preserving the network integrity by shutting its services.

He continued that the firm could also mount a legal challenge to the request from the authorities. 

Armstrong was responding to a question from rotkiapp founder Lefteris Karapetsas.

Coinbase staking service

Coinbase is one of the largest staking solution providers controlling over 14% of the staked Ethereum (ETH) on the Beacon Chain, according to Dune Analytics data.

The US-based firm revealed that crypto staking accounted for 8.5% of its revenue during the second quarter, adding that the product was a high-growth area for its operation.

The firm offers crypto-staking solutions for Ethereum, Algorand (ALGO), Cosmos (ATOM), Cardano (ADA), Solana (SOL), and Tezos (XTZ).

It also recently began offering Ethereum staking for institutional clients in early August.

Meanwhile, reports have emerged that the SEC was investigating Coinbase’s staking product.

Validators and regulatory fears

In light of the US sanction on Tornado Cash, the crypto community has become increasingly worried that regulators could force centralized entities under their jurisdiction to censor transactions on the Ethereum protocol.

Reports revealed that 66% of Beacon Chain depositors cum validators could likely accede to censorship requests from authorities.

In response, Ethereum cofounder Vitalik Buterin said he wanted validators who would comply with such censorship requests to have their staked tokens burned.

Meanwhile, another report has highlighted how sanctions against Tornado Cash could generally impact Bitcoin Lightning Network and web3 projects.

Source: https://cryptoslate.com/coinbase-will-shut-down-staking-service-if-regulators-request-censoring-transactions/