There is no perfect formula, like 50/50 or 60/40. This goes back to your needs and everyday usage of bitcoin. If you already have KYC bitcoin, it’s up to you to determine if you want to keep it or sell it and try to acquire non-KYC bitcoin. It is unwise to try and make already KYC’d bitcoin hidden or otherwise private. If you’re looking to acquire non-KYC bitcoin, then the best idea would be to sell any KYC bitcoin and then use tools like the ones listed below to try and maintain privacy best practices.
As a personal preference, I lean more on the non-KYC bitcoin privacy side — I don’t believe any entity or governing body should know how or what I spend my bitcoin on. That isn’t to say I don’t have any KYC bitcoin — but I understand the risk I’m taking. It’s easy enough for me to buy bitcoin from an exchange rather than going through some additional hoops for privacy, such as those required to buy from Bisq , a peer-to-peer exchange. — but when I am interested in privacy I consider such services.
Another tool that I use to take back my privacy is RaspiBlitz , a Bitcoin and Lightning node. You can build this device at home running off a Raspberry Pi. The service I use with it is JoinMarket which utilizes CoinJoin . I use Electrum (another service in the Raspiblitz suite) to be able to create a new wallet with loads of new addresses, so when coinjoined transactions are complete, I can send them to many addresses and not reuse addresses. This helps to reduce the deterministic hierarchy of my UTXO history, something that many chain-analysis companies use to track bitcoin transactions. This is not meant to be a technical guide, but by using the two tools mentioned, I can create new and destroy old wallets as needed while continuing to send bitcoin to my choosing. Now this isn’t a foolproof method. If I go and deposit bitcoin back onto my exchange (or any place I KYC with) because I want fiat, then essentially all the work I did can be undone. Why? Because reusing a bitcoin address is the fastest way to reconnect all the points in between. So, if you do end up using JoinMarket and Electrum, your ultimate end goal is to keep post-coinjoined KYC bitcoin away from addresses and places where you have to KYC. Keep your stacks separate.
In the end, like everything else between privacy and freedom, Bitcoin falls into a conundrum as well. There is no perfect solution for each Bitcoin user, but one should familiarize themselves with how block explorers work, privacy tools, such as JoinMarket, and how much information you are required to give up with performing a KYC. There is space for both kyc and non-kyc bitcoin as well, just find your balance and know to keep each separate.
This is a guest post by Anthony Feliciano. Opinions expressed are entirely their own and do not necessarily reflect those of BTC Inc or Bitcoin Magazine.