Gate七月透明度报告发布:稳健实现多维增长
🔹衍生品交易量达 7,400 亿美元,市占率攀升至 11%,创年度新高🔹Launchpad、Launchpool 全面爆发,超额认购率高达 7325.60%,高峰 APR 超 4500%🔹Gate Alpha在7月份上线了超过400个代币,空投数量及奖励持续刷新纪录🔹储备金总规模达 105.04 亿美元,$GT 累计销毁超 1.8 亿枚
Gate 将继续以强劲增长拓展全球生态布局,致力于为用户打造更安全、高效、充满活力的数字资产生态系统。
完整报告详见:https://www.gate.com/zh/announcements/article/46650
US Treasury weighs digital ID verification in DeFi to tackle illicit finance
The US Department of the Treasury is seeking public feedback on how digital identity tools and other emerging technologies could be used to fight illicit finance in crypto markets, with one option being embedding identity checks into decentralized finance (DeFi) smart contracts.
The consultation, published this week, stems from the newly enacted Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for US Stablecoins Act (GENIUS Act), signed into law in July.
The Act, which sets out a regulatory framework for payment stablecoin issuers, directs the Treasury to explore new compliance technologies, including application programming interfaces (APIs), artificial intelligence, digital identity verification and blockchain monitoring.
One of the ideas in the request for comment is the potential for DeFi protocols to integrate digital identity credentials directly into their code. Under this model, a smart contract could automatically verify a user’s credential before executing a transaction, effectively building Know Your Customer (KYC) and Anti-Money Laundering (AML) safeguards into blockchain infrastructure.
Treasury: digital IDs could cut compliance costs
According to Treasury, digital identity solutions, which may include government IDs, biometrics or portable credentials, could reduce compliance costs while strengthening privacy protections.
They could also make it easier for financial institutions and DeFi services to detect money laundering, terrorist financing, or sanctions evasion before transactions occur.
Treasury also acknowledged potential challenges, including data privacy concerns and the need to balance innovation with regulatory oversight. “Treasury welcomes input on any matter that commenters believe is relevant to Treasury’s efforts,” the agency wrote.
Public comments are open until Oct. 17, 2025. Following the consultation, Treasury will submit a report to Congress and may issue guidance or propose new rules based on the findings.
Related: GENIUS Act yield ban may push trillions into tokenized assets — ex-bank exec
US banks warn against stablecoin yield loophole
Last week, several major US banking groups, led by the Bank Policy Institute (BPI), urged Congress to tighten rules under the GENIUS Act, warning that a loophole could let stablecoin issuers bypass restrictions on paying interest.
In a letter sent Tuesday, BPI said the gap could allow issuers to partner with exchanges or affiliates to offer yields, undermining the intent of the law. The group cautioned that unchecked growth of yield-bearing stablecoins could trigger up to $6.6 trillion in deposit outflows from traditional banks, threatening credit access for businesses.
Magazine: Bitcoin vs stablecoins showdown looms as GENIUS Act nears