Deep Tide TechFlow news, on May 11, according to Ki Young Ju, founder and CEO of CryptoQuant, a 'dark' stablecoin may likely emerge in the future. Stablecoins act as a bridge between the internet and the real world, so there needs to be someone to manage them. So far, companies like Tether and Circle have achieved this by depositing cash reserves into banks. Apart from combating money laundering activities, governments have not really intervened in stablecoins, allowing them to be used as a safe asset storage place by various groups, including miners.
However, this situation is changing, and stablecoins may face strict government regulation, just like traditional banks. Those who use stablecoins for large international transfers may begin to look for 'dark stablecoins' that can resist censorship. There are two ways to create dark stablecoins:
1. Algorithmic stablecoins not controlled by governments.
2. Stablecoins issued by countries that do not censor financial transactions.
USDT itself was once considered a censorship-resistant stablecoin. If Tether chooses not to comply with U.S. government regulations under a future Trump administration, it could become a dark stablecoin in an increasingly censored internet economy.