The post Bitcoin Isn’t Dying, It’s Becoming Domesticated appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Opinion by: Nic Puckrin, CEO of Coin Bureau The great decentralization experiment that began with the creation of Bitcoin is being progressively domesticated; collared, tagged and rehoused inside the very architecture it was built to route around. Wall Street’s wrappers and government rulebooks are metamorphosing a peer-to-peer (P2P) monetary network into a product line. The speed of that redomestication should unsettle anyone who still cares about the original ethos, and it should not be ignored anymore. For years, the establishment laughed at Bitcoin…now it lists it.  The shift is purely for financial gain. It’s seen in the likes of spot exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and other traditional finance (TradFi) pipelines as cypherpunk money (and its ethos) convert into a fee machine for the world’s largest managers. Consider the United States Bitcoin ETFs; they absorbed about $9 billion, proving that passive wrappers (not wallets) now drive growth. In the short run, it appears to be validation, but in reality, and in the long run, it resembles capture more closely. Bitcoin Halving Progress, Source: BitBo Wrappers, gatekeepers, chokepoints Buying a share of a trust is not acquiring a bearer asset, and since shareholders don’t hold keys…they don’t hold claims. Those claims are serviced by a small set of custodians and market-makers whose operational choices become de facto policy for millions of investors. Then, when a single company sits at the center of most of the sector’s spot-ETF custody, the network’s practical censorship-resistance is functionally outsourced to one compliance program. Look toward centralized exchanges (CEXs) like Coinbase, which now serves as a custodian for over 80% of US crypto ETF issuers. This is how centralization happens out in the open, where price discovery migrates from self-custodied markets to the closing auctions. In the US, spot-Bitcoin ETFs now command a large share of spot trading… The post Bitcoin Isn’t Dying, It’s Becoming Domesticated appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. Opinion by: Nic Puckrin, CEO of Coin Bureau The great decentralization experiment that began with the creation of Bitcoin is being progressively domesticated; collared, tagged and rehoused inside the very architecture it was built to route around. Wall Street’s wrappers and government rulebooks are metamorphosing a peer-to-peer (P2P) monetary network into a product line. The speed of that redomestication should unsettle anyone who still cares about the original ethos, and it should not be ignored anymore. For years, the establishment laughed at Bitcoin…now it lists it.  The shift is purely for financial gain. It’s seen in the likes of spot exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and other traditional finance (TradFi) pipelines as cypherpunk money (and its ethos) convert into a fee machine for the world’s largest managers. Consider the United States Bitcoin ETFs; they absorbed about $9 billion, proving that passive wrappers (not wallets) now drive growth. In the short run, it appears to be validation, but in reality, and in the long run, it resembles capture more closely. Bitcoin Halving Progress, Source: BitBo Wrappers, gatekeepers, chokepoints Buying a share of a trust is not acquiring a bearer asset, and since shareholders don’t hold keys…they don’t hold claims. Those claims are serviced by a small set of custodians and market-makers whose operational choices become de facto policy for millions of investors. Then, when a single company sits at the center of most of the sector’s spot-ETF custody, the network’s practical censorship-resistance is functionally outsourced to one compliance program. Look toward centralized exchanges (CEXs) like Coinbase, which now serves as a custodian for over 80% of US crypto ETF issuers. This is how centralization happens out in the open, where price discovery migrates from self-custodied markets to the closing auctions. In the US, spot-Bitcoin ETFs now command a large share of spot trading…

Bitcoin Isn’t Dying, It’s Becoming Domesticated

2025/10/01 16:54

Opinion by: Nic Puckrin, CEO of Coin Bureau

The great decentralization experiment that began with the creation of Bitcoin is being progressively domesticated; collared, tagged and rehoused inside the very architecture it was built to route around.

Wall Street’s wrappers and government rulebooks are metamorphosing a peer-to-peer (P2P) monetary network into a product line. The speed of that redomestication should unsettle anyone who still cares about the original ethos, and it should not be ignored anymore.

For years, the establishment laughed at Bitcoin…now it lists it. 

The shift is purely for financial gain. It’s seen in the likes of spot exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and other traditional finance (TradFi) pipelines as cypherpunk money (and its ethos) convert into a fee machine for the world’s largest managers.

Consider the United States Bitcoin ETFs; they absorbed about $9 billion, proving that passive wrappers (not wallets) now drive growth. In the short run, it appears to be validation, but in reality, and in the long run, it resembles capture more closely.

Bitcoin Halving Progress, Source: BitBo

Wrappers, gatekeepers, chokepoints

Buying a share of a trust is not acquiring a bearer asset, and since shareholders don’t hold keys…they don’t hold claims. Those claims are serviced by a small set of custodians and market-makers whose operational choices become de facto policy for millions of investors.

Then, when a single company sits at the center of most of the sector’s spot-ETF custody, the network’s practical censorship-resistance is functionally outsourced to one compliance program. Look toward centralized exchanges (CEXs) like Coinbase, which now serves as a custodian for over 80% of US crypto ETF issuers.

This is how centralization happens out in the open, where price discovery migrates from self-custodied markets to the closing auctions. In the US, spot-Bitcoin ETFs now command a large share of spot trading on active days. 

Governance influence migrates from users to lawyers through prospectuses, while risk migrates from many small operational domains (like wallets or nodes) to fewer, larger ones. 

It doesn’t start with a motive or sinister intent, just the math of convenience as it compounds over time. Consider Europe, where the Markets in Crypto-Assets (MiCA) regulation was sold as clarity — and in many ways is — yet the stablecoin regime exposes an awkward truth about cross-border fungibility and regulatory arbitrage.

Identifiably branded tokens can slosh across jurisdictions with uneven reserve standards, allowing narratives that preach “safety” to mask a new, centralized dependency on policymakers to fix gaps after scale arrives. 

Related: Strategy adds $18M in Bitcoin on fifth anniversary of BTC strategy

Defenders of the ETF onslaught argue that this is how every asset class matures, but Bitcoin is in a class of its own; it’s a settlement network with monetary properties. 

It isn’t just a line item to round out, and the more demand is intermediated through products that explicitly prevent self-custody, the more Bitcoin ceases to be a check on centralized power and instead becomes an annex of it. This trend challenges Bitcoin’s self-custody roots, and “number go up” will never be a sufficient trade for “rights go away.” 

Make ETFs a bridge, not a cage

Daily Net ETF Inflows, Source: SoSo Value.

Fear not. There is a better path available. 

Imagine the same billions of dollars rushing into wrappers, only this time paired with a self-custody norm. One where brokers on-ramp directly into wallets, institutions hold native assets and publish detailed proof-of-reserves (PoRs), and plan administrators default to multisig distributions. 

It’s not that far-fetched an idea. What this would achieve is maturation consistent with the original ethos of Bitcoin — scaling without the need to surrender.

Currently, Bitcoin is being translated for Wall Street in ways that maximize returns while minimizing friction with outdated gatekeepers that are no longer truly needed. 

When a single ETF complex dominates flows, a single custodian holds all the keys and a single regulator rewrites the terms mid-cycle, decentralization fades to dust. What is left in those ashes is a service-level agreement that effectively domesticates Bitcoin and everything it was made to achieve.

The mandate is simple: Treat ETFs as bridges, not cages. Flows should only be celebrated in headlines and by word-of-mouth if they fund the infrastructure that expands P2P liquidity and self-custody. Disclosures that quantify custodial concentration and censorship risks would be given by default.

The job now is to slip the leash of TradFi’s domestication and, politely (and persistently), release Bitcoin from centralizing inside the very institutions it started out trying to transcend. The time to genuinely decentralize Bitcoin is now.

Opinion by: Nic Puckrin, CEO of Coin Bureau.

This article is for general information purposes and is not intended to be and should not be taken as legal or investment advice. The views, thoughts, and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

Source: https://cointelegraph.com/news/bitcoin-isnt-dying?utm_source=rss_feed&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=rss_partner_inbound

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.
Share Insights

You May Also Like

Health Insurers To Cover Covid Vaccines Despite RFK, Jr. Moves

Health Insurers To Cover Covid Vaccines Despite RFK, Jr. Moves

The post Health Insurers To Cover Covid Vaccines Despite RFK, Jr. Moves appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The nation’s biggest health insurance companies will continue to cover vaccinations – including those against Covid-19 and seasonal flu – previously recommended by a federal advisory committee, America’s Health Insurance Plans said Wednesday, Sept. 17, 2025. In this photo is a free flu and Covid-19 vaccine shots available sign, CVS, Queens, New York. (Photo by: Lindsey Nicholson/Universal Images Group via Getty Images) UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images The nation’s biggest health insurance companies will continue to cover vaccinations – including those against Covid-19 and seasonal flu – previously recommended by a federal advisory committee. The announcement by America’s Health Insurance Plans (AHIP), which includes CVS Health’s Aetna, Humana, Cigna, Centene and an array of Blue Cross and Blue Shield plans as members, comes ahead of the first meeting of the reconstituted Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices, which now has new members chosen by U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a vaccine critic. “Health plans are committed to maintaining and ensuring affordable access to vaccines,” AHIP said in a statement Wednesday. “Health plan coverage decisions for immunizations are grounded in each plan’s ongoing, rigorous review of scientific and clinical evidence, and continual evaluation of multiple sources of data.” The move by AHIP is good news for millions of Americans at a time of year when they flock to drugstores, pharmacies, physician’s offices and outpatient clinics to get their seasonal flu and Covid shots. Kennedy’s changes to U.S. vaccine policy have created confusion across the country over whether certain vaccines long covered by insurance would continue to be. AHIP has now provided some clarity for millions of Americans. “Health plans will continue to cover all ACIP-recommended immunizations that were recommended as of September 1, 2025, including updated formulations of the COVID-19 and influenza vaccines, with no cost-sharing…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/09/18 03:11
Share
Strange $55,868,599 XRP Transfer Lands in Ripple Account: What’s Going On?

Strange $55,868,599 XRP Transfer Lands in Ripple Account: What’s Going On?

The post Strange $55,868,599 XRP Transfer Lands in Ripple Account: What’s Going On? appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. This morning, data from Whale Alert showed that 18,744,800 XRP, worth around $55.9 million, were transferred from an unidentified wallet to one of Ripple’s main accounts. The unknown source and direct route to the crypto company of course caught the attention of traders who monitor these flows for insights into how Ripple manages its XRP holdings. Those who closely follow these movements, such as “XRPwallets” account” say the process is familiar. Ripple brings tokens back into its main account before redistributing them into different channels, such as On-Demand Liquidity corridors, exchange-traded products, custodial structures and investment vehicles.  While this makes the transfer less mysterious, the lack of context around the timing leaves room for speculation in the market. Here’s how XRP price reacted As for the trading side, XRP is currently at around $2.99. Support is at $2.93, and resistance is at $3.05. The daily chart shows the price staying within this narrow range, but the hourly charts show quick drops toward $2.95 that are matched by quick rebounds.  For traders, it is pretty simple: if it breaks above $3.05, it could go toward $3.20, but if it weakens back below $2.90, it will probably test the lower range again. XRP/USD by TradingView It not not the most Ripple has done, but the context makes it a big deal. The market is taking more of an interest in how Ripple handles its reserves, on top of the growing interest from institutions and the new talks about possible privacy features in the XRP Ledger.  In that case, a $55 million transfer is less of a regular adjustment. Source: https://u.today/strange-55868599-xrp-transfer-lands-in-ripple-account-whats-going-on
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/10/06 16:47
Share