The US Senators Thom Tillis (R-NC) and John Hickenlooper (D-CO) have re-introduced a legislative measure to prevent digital owners of the Asset customer funds working with Institutional or Property Capital.
The bill, called the evidence reserves of others Funds (proof) act, also requires monthly inspections from third parties of freedom reserves, building on standards that are already used informally in the digital assets sector.
Initially introduced in 2023, the proof act was a reaction to systemic malfunctions exposed by the collapse of the crypto Exchange FTX.
According to an excerpt from the re -introduced legislation, the implosion of FTX was powered by two operational errors: the merging of customer assets with business funds and the distraction of customer deposits to Alameda Research, a related entity.
These practices have contributed to a criticism of reserve shortage that users left without use when the platform failed, which led to losing more than $ 8 billion.
Security of requirements
The Proof Act proposes two primary requirements for trade fairs and preservators of digital assets. Firstly, the regulatory standards would determine explicitly for combining customer and institutional funds.
Secondly, it would oblige these platforms to undergo monthly proof of reserves (POR) inspections, carried out by a neutral third party, preferably a certified audit company.
According to the provisions of the bill, the results of each Por inspection would be submitted to the US Department of Treasury, which would be responsible for publicly revealing the findings.
Entities that do not comply with would be confronted under a layered enforcement structure civil fines, with repeated violations that cause escalated consequences.
The bill defines Por as a cryptographic method with which stock markets and stores can verify to verify assets support for user deposits. Techniques such as Merkle Trees of Zero-knowledge proofs enable these entities to demonstrate reserve companies without making sensitive information known.
The process is designed to maintain transparency and at the same time to respect the privacy and security of the platform and its users.
‘Critical step’
Although various crypto companies have voluntarily published reserve statements since the FTX in -order, the proof act deals with the gaps in standardization and supervision. The bill notes that many previous implementations were inconsistent and had no certified Public Accountant (CPA) validation.
The proposal of Tillis and Hickenlooper wants to relocate the practice from voluntary to mandatory, for which uniform reserve substitution is required on platforms that are digital assets guardian. The legislation emphasizes that American users of crypto -exchanges deserve clear guarantees about the solvency of storage institutions that hold their deposits.
Chainlink welcomed the bill of reintroduction on an X -post, to, to call A “critical step towards determining proof of reserve requirements for digital assets.”
The message added:
“As more real assets move onchain, legislation such as the proof act strengthens the importance of evidence of reserves and is essential to guarantee transparency for the digital asset industry.”