Computer scientist Nick Szabo, whose work helped pave the way for Bitcoin (BTC), has stated that cryptocurrencies are not “trustless” but rather “trust-minimized,” with each possessing a legal attack surface that governments can potentially exploit.
Szabo’s distinction struck at a core belief held by many BTC proponents and comes at a time when there’s a fierce technical debate over how to handle this legal risk that is threatening to split the network.
The Legal Reality of Trust-Minimized Systems
The cryptographer’s comments, made across a series of posts on X, challenged the idealized view of Bitcoin as a system entirely immune to state interference. He argued that while its base layer can withstand more interference than centralized systems, it is not a “magical anarcho-capitalist Swiss army knife.”
According to Szabo, there are two primary legal fronts. The first is financial law, which has been largely managed by the industry’s legal experts. The second, he believes, is far more dangerous: the unpredictable and vast legal territory surrounding arbitrary data.
“The crypto industry does not have the legal expertise to deal with it,” he wrote.
He specifically highlighted that Bitcoin archive nodes, which store the blockchain’s entire history, cannot selectively delete data without breaking their core financial function, making them vulnerable to legal demands for content removal.
While the discussion is theoretical, it has a very real technical counterpart. Recently, a section of Bitcoin developers proposed a code change to limit the amount of non-financial data that can be stored on the blockchain, known as BIP-444.
First published in October, the proposal is a direct reaction to the Bitcoin Core 30 update from June, which increased the data limit for OP_RETURN transactions from 80 bytes to nearly 4 MB.
Supporters of BIP-444, such as Luke Dashjr, argued that allowing large data storage creates legal risks, including the potential for illegal content to be permanently embedded in the blockchain. However, the proposal’s language, which warns of “legal or moral consequences” for those who reject it, sparked some community backlash, with critics calling it coercive.
Community Divided Over Hypothetical Risks
Reactions on X to Szabo’s comments have been varied. Coinjoined Chris, co-founder and CEO of crypto storage platform Seedor, contended that Szabo is “giving too much weight to speculative legal boogeymen,” saying Bitcoin’s strength lies in minimizing technical choke points, not trying to predict every content law on earth.
If regulators could simply outlaw generic data transmission, he argued, they would have killed PGP and Tor “decades ago,” and trimming Bitcoin’s generality out of fear only makes it easier to capture.
Szabo hit back that he is talking about “very real laws in very real jurisdictions” and that node operators, unlike operators of forums or messaging platforms, cannot simply remove offending data.
Meanwhile, macro-minded commentators like J.P. Mayall placed the clash in a broader adoption story, comparing crypto’s estimated 7% to 8% global penetration today with Christianity’s growth once it was legalized in the Roman Empire. In response, Dashjr offered a darker twist: if legalization once multiplied Christianity’s reach, making Bitcoin illegal could, by the same logic, cut its user base to a fraction.
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