Circle, the USDC stablecoin issuer, has suspended USDC holdings in 16 hot wallets used by a variety of businesses, based on a sealed New York civil lawsuit, the stablecoin issuer said. Blockchain researcher ZachXBT accused the action of being, in his view, the “most incompetent freeze” and doubted Circle’s checking and due diligence.
The wallets targeted belonged to exchanges, casinos, and forex platforms, for example, that seemingly had no common factor, so their normal activities were hindered.
ZachXBT remarked that even a simple look would reveal these as business wallets actively used, which is why he wondered about the company’s decision making. The freeze is one more demonstration of how stablecoin issuers still possess centralized control and thus can blacklist addresses if they get a legitimate request or a court order.

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The event has led to a serious discussion about centralized stablecoin control and censorship resistance in crypto. Even though the USD coin’s behavior seems to be consistent with the regulation, some people who are anti-crypto side of the story think that by doing so Circle is actually going against the principle of decentralization of crypto.
The fact that Circle has closed the account without notifying the users might have impacted the trust in USDC and other centralized stablecoins.
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The Blockchain Association has demanded Circle to disclose more about its governance when making decisions. Circle’s CEO, Jeremy Allaire, pointed out that they are always in favor of conforming with the laws and that their first concern is protecting the customers even though it is hard to reconcile legal requirements with decentralization.

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