Crypto
The Identity Paradox: Cardano's Privacy Solution and Surge in Market Volumes
724FinanceBerk Arıcan

The digital age presents a stark paradox: security systems designed to protect children are rapidly transforming into breach vectors, with artificial intelligence accelerating the scale and speed of potential damage. Against this backdrop, new legislation passed by the U.S. House of Representatives marks a turning point that will fundamentally reshape the future of the internet and identity management.
The Centralized Failure of Identity Data
The exposure of driver's licenses by AU10TIX—provider for giants like TikTok and Uber—for over a year in 2024, and the breach of Discord's age-verification system in 2025 compromising 70,000 government IDs, highlight the critical fragility of centralized data. As AI lowers the barrier for hackers, the storage of personal identity has become the single largest liability for the digital economy.The KIDS Act and the Architecture of Surveillance
The U.S. House passed the Kids Internet and Digital Safety (KIDS) Act on June 29 with a 267-117 vote, aiming to shield minors from online harm. However, the mechanism creates a de facto surveillance state by imposing liability without an explicit mandate, forcing companies into a difficult risk calculus.Market Volumes and the Liquidity Shift
Separate from the regulatory debates, market data indicates a significant resurgence in trading activity for June. The downtrend in centralized exchange (CEX) volumes has finally broken, signaling renewed investor interest.Centralized data silos function like assets with an unexpected unlock schedule; once breached, the supply of compromised data floods the market. While regulatory pressure inflates the supply of collected data, zero-knowledge architectures like Cardano's Veridian act as a necessary deflationary mechanism. The record surge in RWA volumes to $311 billion quantitatively confirms that liquidity is pivoting from pure speculation to real-world utility. This is a clear signal that market demand for privacy-preserving infrastructure is set to outpace the supply of surveillance tools.