Categories: CryptoNews

UK May Impose Its Blockchain Regulation In The Coming Months

Blockchain technology will be subject to regulation, whether people like it or not. The United Kingdom may very well be the first country to present its regulatory guidelines in the coming months. The Bank of England’s Fintech Accelerator program is one of the reasons why this regulation will come to fruition, as distributed ledgers are the foundation of new and innovative products and services.

Regulating Private and Permissioned Blockchains Is Good

When any government states they will regulate blockchain technology, it is important to keep in mind that we are talking about permissioned distributed ledgers. The Bitcoin blockchain cannot be regulated, as there is no one to exert control over it. If the network rejects any proposed changes or guidelines, they will not go into effect. Things are very different where private blockchains are concerned.

Regulators are particularly concerned over risk mitigation and how permissioned distributed ledgers will handle this aspect. Since none of these systems will require proof of work or network consensus, there are plenty of risks associated with this technology. One rogue element among trusted parties can create a lot of havoc.


At the same time, UK regulators are looking closely at the permissionless blockchains as well. Events such as The DAO hack stem forth from deploying premature technology in a live environment. Moreover, there was a lot of sloppy coding involved, which is of particular concern for what was supposed to be a trustless ecosystem.

Related Post

Changes will also be coming from the European Commission, as they are looking at ways to allow private blockchains in the financial sector. However, they want to ensure money laundering cannot become an issue, as it is today. The added transparency of blockchain tech should help in this regard, but permissioned blockchains may not provide the full records one would be looking for.

One thing to keep in mind is how these regulatory guidelines may not be imposed until a few months – or years – from today. Establishing a regulatory draft is one thing, but the final version will always look very different. At the same time, these guidelines may affect the cryptocurrency sector – and particularly exchanges – as well, which can be either a good or a bad thing.

Image credit 1

If you liked this article, follow us on Twitter @themerklenews and make sure to subscribe to our newsletter to receive the latest bitcoin and altcoin price analysis and the latest cryptocurrency news.

JP Buntinx

JP Buntinx is a FinTech and Bitcoin enthusiast living in Belgium. His passion for finance and technology made him one of the world's leading freelance Bitcoin writers, and he aims to achieve the same level of respect in the FinTech sector.

Share
Published by
JP Buntinx

Recent Posts

Velocity Ticket Debuts As The AI-Powered Invoicing Tool Every Service Business Needs in 2026

Velocity Ticket is trying to fix a major gap in businesses, and the approach it…

2 days ago

Axelar Confirms $4.67M Exploit on Secret Network Bridge, Core Protocol Remains Unaffected

Axelar is moving fast to contain damage after identifying a security incident that has resulted…

3 days ago

Sui Synthetic Dollar suiUSDe Gets Its Own Website

suiUSDe now has a dedicated landing page. The token, officially the eSui Dollar, comes out…

3 days ago

Ventuals Winds Down HIP-3 DEX, vHYPE Withdrawals Now Live For All Holders

Ventuals has fully wound down its HIP-3 DEX, and vHYPE withdrawals are now open. The…

3 days ago

Avalanche Launches Payments Collective With Franklin Templeton And 25 Others

Avalanche has launched the Avalanche Payments Collective, bringing together 28 organizations spanning nearly every layer…

4 days ago

ASTER Whale Reopens 5x Long Days After Getting Fully Liquidated On The Same Token

A wallet tracked as 0x5f91 just opened a fresh 5x leveraged long on ASTER, putting…

4 days ago