On 8 August 2022, the Office of Foreign Assets Control of the U.S. Department of Treasury
That same day, the domain used to host the project was taken down, and GitHub
However, the feds were not only going after Tornado Cash as an entity. They were also going after the builders of the protocol. Two days after it was blacklisted, Alexey Pertsev, one of the founders of the protocol, was
With that, the Department of Treasury had effectively taken down Tornado Cash in almost its entirety. However, the question remains; why? What made Tornado Cash so dangerous that the federal government deployed everything they had to bring it down?
When people talk about the benefits of Bitcoin as a currency and indeed Crypto as a financial system, they never fail to mention anonymity. Bitcoin, they often say, is great because it offers anonymity, which is something traditional banking doesn't offer by design. However, that isn't entirely true. For example, if you hold your coins in a centralized exchange, you have very little anonymity.
Even if you hold your coin in your address, on-chain analysis could help snoopy third parties either link the address to your real-world Identity or trace what you're doing with your funds.
For people who require complete financial privacy, this would simply not do. Since the world of cryptocurrency is probably the closest approximation of a free market anyone can find, it wasn't long before this problem was solved.
The solution to the pseudonymous problem of crypto was something called
This gives law enforcement a huge headache. Before the popularity of these mixing services, law enforcement could trace laundered or stolen crypto funds with a great degree of accuracy. In fact, they could make it so that no other reputable organization makes transactions with tainted addresses or crypto.
Bitcoin mixers throw a spanner in that wheel and make that idea completely untenable. It's easy, as a crypto maximalist, to argue that the government is wrong to be against these mixers. However, the facts paint a more nuanced picture.
In 2013, in the wake of the robbery of Sheep Marketplace, Bitcoin fog, a mixer, was used to
In other words, it's clear that these mixers are being used for illegal transactions, and the government is correct to be interested in them.
The US government has been on the trail of Bitcoin mixers for a long while. Bitcoin blender, one of the biggest bitcoin mixers,
One of the biggest Bitcoin mixing services in the world, Blender.io also got its share of sanctions after The U.S. Treasury Department's Office of Foreign Assets Control
These arrests made it clear that the government was increasing its surveillance of the crypto space, and was hell-bent on making it difficult for criminals to launder stolen funds.
However, Tornado Cash's present troubles are not just because it is a Bitcoin mixer. In other words, it wasn't targeted because it was just a run of the mill Bitcoin mixing service. There was something else.
In May 2022, there was an audacious hack on Ronin bridge — a blockchain project associated with the popular play-to-earn game Axie Infinity. The hack
But that heist is just the biggest in a long string of incredible money laundering activities. According to law enforcement, Tornado Cash, since 2019, has been a willing tool used to
Lazarus isn't Tornado Cash's only client either. The service was also used to launder funds stolen from the
These all show that Tornado Cash, at least in the eyes of law enforcement, wasn't just an innocent open source protocol anyone could use. It was a favorite tool for hackers and criminals, and they used it whenever they could and however they could. Like almost every Bitcoin mixing service, Tornado Cash has almost no guardrails to stop cybercriminals from using it. Despite public statements proposing KYC protocols, the service has continued to operate in the most laissez-faire manner. In retrospect, this meant that the service was always going to get sanctioned. It was completely Inevitable.
It's difficult to envision a future where law enforcement efforts are enough to stop Bitcoin mixing. While they can always take the big players out of the game, the fact that these services have no regulatory obligations and can be used for legal and illegal purposes means that they are going away no time soon.
Right now, it seems like the big players in crypto are content to disavow these mixers. Tether, for example,
These are funds that could have helped countless innovations and may have helped build a more vibrant and safe crypto ecosystem. These are funds that may never be recovered.
While it's unlikely that Bitcoin mixing, and indeed Bitcoin mixers, go out of fashion by themselves, there's hope that they may eventually become obsolete. According to