|

Ethereum-based shyft network launches, aims for FATF- compliant DeFi

The mainnet will host a “decentralized SWIFT” and look to connect Defi pools without sacrificing composability.

The Shyft Network, a platform designed to help cryptocurrency firms comply with anti-money laundering (AML) rules, has launched its main public blockchain system.

Combining elements of Ethereum and Bitcoin, the Shyft Network is an open base-layer to house decentralized identity applications, compliant cryptocurrency transactions and tools to make decentralized finance (Defi) palatable to regulators, without compromising the latter’s open appeal.

Alongside Wednesday’s main net launch is the unveiling of the Shyft Federation, a diverse group of 21 entities, from core crypto development teams to large financial institutions, who will run nodes on the Shyft Network and ensure it has a decentralized architecture from the get-go.

Regulation of cryptocurrency is inescapable. The Shyft project helps crypto companies meet the identity and data sharing requirements of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), but with the least amount of centralized trusted authority, akin to how blockchains already work.

“A lot of projects are taking a kind of progressive decentralization approach,” Shyft co-founder Joseph Weinberg said in an interview. “But we are saying this needs to be hardened, ready for primetime, and come with really good censorship resistance across the infrastructure from day one.”

The Shyft Federation consists of 21 private Tor nodes (referring to “the onion router,” a layered system designed to protect privacy), run by companies, organizations, and even a sovereign government (Weinberg wouldn’t disclose which country), performing a function similar to mining a blockchain. Named Federation members to include CoinShares, BitFury, ChainSafe, and Fabric Labs. 

Under the hood, Shyft runs a modified version of the Ethereum Virtual Machine (EVM), a kind of software rulebook that governs the changing state of the blockchain, followed by all the nodes on the network. In the case of Shyft, a proof-of-authority consensus system is operated by the Federation of nodes, with all the relaying done inside Tor to protect against things like denial of service attacks, explained Weinberg.

Decentralized SWIFT

In legacy finance, centralized technology such as SWIFT exists to collect counterparty information and route payments. (Blockchains were not designed to require any identity information for routing payments on-chain, so this means there is no way to determine counterparty risk.) 

Shyft’s Periscope application, a system of smart contracts running on top of the network’s base fabric, creates a counterparty discovery and coordination layer for crypto finance, Weinberg said. Periscope is designed to satisfy the data-sharing requirements of FATF’s so-called “travel rule,” but without sacrificing the core pillars of decentralization and open innovation, he said. 

In addition to hosting the Veriscope travel rule solution, the now-live Shyft manner, will be home to a national identity system for Bermuda built with the country’s government, and also a set of smart contracts to help regulators accept and work with Defi.

KYC and composability

The problem encountered when throwing a lot of KYC at Defi is that it denatures all that’s interesting about it, Weinberg pointed out.

“The moment you add KYC, you break composability,” he said, referring to the idea that Defi projects can easily build atop each other.

To solve for this, Shyft offers an on-chain KYC rules engine that can be customized so that, for example, a KYC policy from one institution can be made available across many institutions at once, or pre-defined rules can be created around particular institutional liquidity pools and users can choose to opt-in, Weinberg said.

“So we can basically start to re-architect composability,” said Weinberg, adding:

Author

CoinDesk Analysis Team

CoinDesk is the media platform for the next generation of investors exploring how cryptocurrencies and digital assets are contributing to the evolution of the global financial system.

More from CoinDesk Analysis Team
Share:

Markets move fast. We move first.

Orange Juice Newsletter brings you expert driven insights - not headlines. Every day on your inbox.

By subscribing you agree to our Terms and conditions.

Editor's Picks

BNB Price Forecast: BNB slips below $855 as bearish on-chain signals and momentum indicators turn negative

BNB, formerly known as Binance Coin, continues to trade down around $855 at the time of writing on Tuesday, after a slight decline the previous day. Bearish sentiment further strengthens as BNB’s on-chain and derivatives data show rising retail activity.

Top Crypto Losers: Aster, Midnight, and Ethena extend losses as selling pressure mounts

Aster, Midnight, and Ethena are the altcoins with the most losses over the last 24 hours, as the broader cryptocurrency market weakens amid Bitcoin dropping below $86,000. ASTER, NIGHT, and ENA risk further losses as selling pressure mounts and risk-off sentiment spreads across the crypto market.

Ethereum Price Forecast: BitMine acquires 102,259 ETH as price plunges 5%

Ethereum (ETH) treasury company BitMine Immersion scaled up its digital asset stash last week after acquiring 102,259 ETH since its last update. The purchase has increased the company's holdings to 3.96 million ETH, worth about $11.82 billion at the time of publication.

Strategy scoops about $1 billion in Bitcoin for second consecutive week

Bitcoin (BTC) treasury and financial intelligence firm Strategy expanded its holdings following another round of weekly accumulation.

Orange Juice Newsletter – Smart insights by real people. Every day.

A free newsletter highlighting key market trends to help traders stay a step ahead. Daily insights on the most relevant trading topics, compiled by our experts in an easy-to-read format so you never miss an important move.

Bitcoin: Fed delivers, yet fails to impress BTC traders

Bitcoin (BTC) continues de trade within the recent consolidation phase, hovering around $92,000 at the time of writing on Friday, as investors digest the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) cautious December rate cut and its implications for risk assets.