Michael Saylor Dismisses Proof-of-Reserves as ’Legal Liability’—Crypto’s Transparency Dilemma
MicroStrategy’s CEO doubles down on Bitcoin maximalism—calls on-chain audits ’unnecessary risks’ while traditional finance snickers about ’selective transparency.’
Who needs proof when you’ve got conviction? The crypto markets shrug and keep stacking sats.
Community slams Saylor’s statement
His remarks sparked immediate backlash from parts of the crypto community.
Pseudonymous analyst Pledditor called the comments “a giant red flag,” arguing that while privacy concerns are valid, PoR doesn’t necessarily compromise asset security.
The analyst said:
“[PoR] does NOT compromise the security of your coins. Saylor either has something to hide, or he’s completely ignorant about how Bitcoin works.”
Over the past years, PoR initiatives have gained mainstream adoption following the shocking collapse of FTX in 2022.
Since then, several crypto exchanges, including Binance, have published regular PoR to regain user trust. In fact, Bitcoin spot ETF providers like Bitwise have also publicly listed wallet addresses tied to their products to support real-time verification.
Market observers said these moves align with the Core ethical principles of transparency within the BTC ecosystem.
However, despite holding over 580,000 BTC, Strategy has not followed suit.
Still, blockchain analytics firm Arkham Intelligence claims it has tracked down on-chain addresses linked to nearly all of Strategy’s Bitcoin trove.