The Oasis Protocol, a public blockchain with an eye on creating a more private and scalable version of decentralized finance (DeFi), has partnered with the compliance-focused Shyft Network.
Announced Thursday, the partnership will deliver anti-money laundering (AML) strictures by leveraging elements of Shyft’s identity system and whitelisting of items/IP addresses, while also protecting users’ commercial and transactional data. There’s also a line to be walked on making DeFi compliant with the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), the companies said.
Oasis Labs, creator of Oasis Protocol, raised some $45 million in a private token pre-sale in 2018, backed by Andreessen Horowitz, Binance, Pantera and others.
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The Oasis mainnet, which went live in November, is a layer one blockchain that sets out to do the same sort of things as Ethereum, albeit in a way that is potentially more scalable. It also allows developers to run smart contracts that keep data private while allowing for machine-learning computation to run on that private data, according to Oasis Product Lead Luca Cosentino.
Privacy for Oasis means being able to decide what part of your application stays private and what part of your application stays public, he added.
For now, Oasis is about building bridges to the second-largest blockchain, as well as Ethereum-based DeFi apps including Uniswap, Chainlink, Balancer and Meter. Looking ahead, Cosentino sees the potential to unlock a much less limited DeFi universe, which is currently hobbled by high fees, behaviors of self-motivated traders and lack of a reputation system, he said.
“Ethereum is presenting a few problems to the DeFi space in general and on the transparency side of things,” Cosentino said in an interview. “Despite being transparent, it doesn’t offer any information to the other side of the transaction. If I’m an institution and want to participate in DeFi I really can’t because I don’t know who I’m working with on the other side.”
Institutions welcome
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The problem, said Suzanne Ennis, senior VP of global partnerships at Shyft Network, is that large liquidity providers are blocked from interacting with the DeFi space because of regulatory constraints and lack of clarity on AML-compliant procedures.
“Regulators, having seen no directionality from the DeFi ecosystem, are forced to comprehend the space with the lens of (potentially obsolete/irrelevant) loosely-matching, past environments that regulations were applied to,” Ennis said via email.
Shyft is known for its work helping crypto exchanges identify one another and exchange data in a way that complies with the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) “Travel Rule” for virtual assets.
Read more: Shyft Debuts ‘Decentralized Version of SWIFT’ for FATF ‘Travel Rule’
In this case, Shyft is shining a…
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