A team of researchers from Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg recently published a paper detailing methods investigators and courts can use to determine the validity of deanonymized data on the Bitcoin (BTC) blockchain.
The team’s preprint paper, “Argumentation Schemes for Blockchain Deanonymization,” lays out a blueprint for conducting, verifying and presenting investigations into crimes involving cryptocurrency transactions. While the paper focuses on the German and United States legal systems, the authors state that the findings should be generally applicable.
Bitcoin-related crime investigations revolve around the deanonymization of suspected criminals, a process made more challenging by blockchains’ pseudonymous nature. Users conducting blockchain transactions are identified by wallets (unique software addresses) instead of legal names.
However, blockchains are inherently transparent. Whenever data is added to a blockchain ledger, the transaction is recorded and made available for anyone with access to the blockchain to see.
Investigators trying to determine who is behind a specific wallet use the information ensconced in blockchain transactions (blocks) as data points that, when combined, form a digital paper trail.
According to the research team, the current bottleneck when it comes to these investigations is no longer a technological one; it’s a legal issue.
Law enforcement agencies have access to the tools needed to conduct preliminary blockchain analysis, but these early data points represent circumstantial evidence.
This evidence relies on certain raw assumptions that can only be validated by connecting on-chain activity to off-chain activity, such as compelling an exchange to disclose the identity
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