Considering that protocol-level censorship is deterrent to the crypto ecosystem’s goal of highly open and accessible finance, the community has been keeping track of Ethereum’s growing compliance with standards laid down by the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC). Over the last 24 hours, the Ethereum network was found to enforce OFAC compliance on over 73% of its blocks.
In Oct. 2022, Cointelegraph reported on the rising censorship concerns after 51% of Ethereum blocks were found compliant with OFAC standards. However, data from mevWatch confirmed that the minting of OFAC-compliant blocks on a daily basis has grown to 73% as of Nov. 3.
Some MEV-Boost relays — that are regulated under OFAC — will censor certain transactions. As a result, to ensure the neutrality of Ethereum, the network needs to adopt a non-censoring MEV-Boost relay.
Ethereum validators can reduce OFAC compliance by discarding relays in their MEV-Boost configuration that censor transactions, such as BloXroute Max Profit, BloxRoute Ethical, Manifold and Relayooor.
Compliance with OFAC allows the United States government agency to enforce economic and trade sanctions. Previously, the agency sanctioned Tornado Cash and several Ethereum addresses.
As of today, 45% of all Ethereum blocks are considered compliant with OFAC.
Related: Ethereum sets record ETH short liquidations, wiping out $500 million in 2 days
The mainstream adoption of Bitcoin (BTC) and Ether (ETH) sped up after UnionBank, one of the largest universal banks in the Philippines, debuted cryptocurrency trading in partnership with the Swiss crypto firm Metaco.
“We are proud to continue UnionBank’s series of industry firsts, this time being the first regulated bank in the country allowing digital currency exchange features for clients,” said Henry Aguda, chief technology officer and chief transformation officer at UnionBank.
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