CZ and Chamath Rarely Agree: The Biggest Shortcoming of Cryptocurrency is Not Price, but Lack of Privacy

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On February 11, in the latest episode of the All-In Podcast, CZ and renowned investor Chamath Palihapitiya presented a disruptive view of market perception: the most serious issue in cryptocurrency today is not price volatility, ETF approvals, or regulatory disputes, but the lack of native privacy at the protocol layer. They believe this flaw is becoming the core obstacle preventing crypto assets from truly mainstream adoption.

Chamath pointed out that while Bitcoin’s public ledger enhances system trustworthiness, it also destroys “homogeneity.” Every transaction can be traced, meaning each Bitcoin carries a complete history and cannot circulate freely like cash. When combined with KYC mechanisms, blockchain records become permanently linked to real identities, significantly weakening anonymity.

CZ further emphasized the real risks. Whether for daily spending, cross-border transfers, or business payments, on-chain data gradually sketches out users’ behavior patterns, address relationships, and even lifestyle habits. In some regions, this exposure of information not only brings legal and political risks but can also threaten personal safety. The original goal of cryptocurrency—“financial freedom”—becomes more constrained under a transparent structure.

Chamath explained why this issue hinders Bitcoin from becoming “digital cash.” Ordinary individuals are reluctant to publicly disclose their financial records long-term, businesses worry about commercial data being tracked, and institutions find it difficult to deploy at scale without privacy protections. As a result, crypto assets remain more as speculative or settlement tools rather than integrated into daily payments and financial infrastructure.

Although solutions like zero-knowledge proofs, mixing tools, and privacy layers exist, they are fragmented, complex, not protocol-default, and often face regulatory scrutiny. CZ and Chamath agree: if privacy cannot be an inherent property of blockchain, the crypto ecosystem remains incomplete. Prices will fluctuate, policies will change, but a financial network without privacy cannot truly serve users worldwide.

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