| The difference is in the liability incurred. So you're the blockchain analysis firm for the Department of Justice, and you're like "omg omg look the coins are moving! omg omg look its going to a centralized exchange account lets go subpoena the records and find out who has the KYC and identifying information behind that account." DOJ busts down the door "aha! got you!" If it was the person that actually hacked or did drug trafficking, then they found that person and charge them with that, wire fraud, money laundering etc. If it was just the recipient then the investigation is still ongoing and much lesser charges are possible. The DOJ would at best case try to find out who the "kingpin" is by overcharging the second person, but the primary observation is that the DOJ has not stopped any particular activity. Either way, its still not quite what happens: The reality is that it is many hops between unrelated people before it hits a centralized exchange that is subpoena-able at all. People.don't.need.or.want.fiat. Especially not a lot of it at any given time. Even hedge funds take in-kind investments of crypto to create a new limited partner. People don't need to cash out first and then invest that cash. |