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The draft U.S. crypto market bill doesn’t just target exchanges — it goes straight at stablecoins.
Issuers face tighter compliance rules, clearer oversight, and explicit expectations around control, reporting, and enforcement.
That matters, because not all stablecoins are built the same.
Centralized stablecoins like USDT or USDC rely on a single issuer, reserve managers, and admin keys. That structure makes compliance easy — but it also concentrates power. Freezes, blacklists, and policy changes happen fast because control is centralized by design.
This is where DAI stands apart.
DAI isn’t issued by a company holding reserves in a bank. It’s overcollateralized on-chain and governed by a decentralized system. There’s no single issuer deciding when funds move or freeze. Risk is distributed, not delegated.
As regulation tightens, the trade-off becomes clearer:
compliance efficiency vs structural neutrality.
DAI may not be flashy, but in a world moving toward heavier oversight, architecture matters more than narratives.
Stable doesn’t just mean price.
It also means how much control you give up to stay that way.
That choice is becoming more important than ever.
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