Dubai is making a major move on its crypto stance. Starting January 12, 2026, the emirate will ban privacy-focused coins including Monero and Zcash from trading and use within its jurisdiction. The new framework draws a sharp distinction: only fiat-backed stablecoins holding sufficient liquid reserves will be permitted, while algorithmic and collateral-dependent tokens face outright rejection. This regulatory shift reflects Dubai's push for enhanced transparency and traceability in digital assets. The move signals how major financial hubs are establishing clearer guardrails—balancing crypto innovation with compliance requirements.
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DaisyUnicorn
· 01-13 00:05
Dubai's recent moves are really aggressive, with privacy coins being directly targeted. It seems that transparency is the future's hard currency.
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0xLuckbox
· 01-13 00:05
Dubai has directly killed privacy coins with this move, but oh well, it's bound to happen sooner or later.
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GasFeeTherapist
· 01-13 00:01
Are Monero and Zcash banned? That’s reasonable. Privacy coins have always been a thorn in the side of regulators. Dubai’s move is clearly aiming to lock crypto in a cage.
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gas_fee_therapist
· 01-12 23:37
Haha, Dubai directly bans privacy coins. Now Monero and Zcash are in trouble. What happened to the promised Web3 freedom...
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AirdropFreedom
· 01-12 23:37
Yinbi is cooling off, Dubai's move is really brilliant... The era of compliance has arrived.
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WhaleStalker
· 01-12 23:35
Privacy coins are down, and Dubai has directly expelled privacy coin members... It's basically a complete showdown.
Dubai is making a major move on its crypto stance. Starting January 12, 2026, the emirate will ban privacy-focused coins including Monero and Zcash from trading and use within its jurisdiction. The new framework draws a sharp distinction: only fiat-backed stablecoins holding sufficient liquid reserves will be permitted, while algorithmic and collateral-dependent tokens face outright rejection. This regulatory shift reflects Dubai's push for enhanced transparency and traceability in digital assets. The move signals how major financial hubs are establishing clearer guardrails—balancing crypto innovation with compliance requirements.