🔐 Pi Network: Getting Ahead in the "Compliance Track"


The European Union and France have set June 30th as the deadline, requiring all crypto companies to comply with MiCA standards, or face closure or exit from the European market.
In the United States, the CLARITY Act is accelerating through Congress, clearly distinguishing which tokens are securities and which are legitimate digital assets.
These two pieces of news together reveal a major trend: the "gray areas" in the crypto world are disappearing.
⚖️ From "Anarchic Celebration" to "Compliance Survival"
Over the past decade, blockchain has rapidly developed thanks to anonymity, borderless operation, and permissionless access, but it has also bred issues like money laundering and market manipulation. Now, the regulatory direction in Europe and America is highly aligned: to survive long-term, projects must be integrated into the global legal system. KYC, identity verification, and compliance licenses, once disliked by the crypto community, are now becoming entry tickets. You may dislike them, but Web3 is moving from a "rebellious phase" to an "adulthood."
Pi Network: Getting Ahead in the "Compliance Track"
In this global regulatory storm, Pi Network stands out as particularly unique. It has required users to complete KYC verification from the start—over 18 million users have passed, and more than 16.7 million have completed mainnet migration. While other projects hurriedly add compliance features, Pi already has the largest verified user pool in the crypto world. This is no longer a disadvantage but a "pre-approval pass" into a legitimate economic system.
📊 The market is changing, and so is Pi’s value logic
More importantly, Pi’s v23 protocol natively supports smart contracts, enabling the construction of compliant applications like DEX and DeFi. In the context of stricter regulation, a Layer 1 network with built-in KYC and compatibility with fiat currency inflows and outflows has become a preferred partner for institutions and governments.
🚀 Will the future belong to "freedom" or "compliance"?
A completely free ecosystem is inevitably prone to misconduct and can be banned by various countries; meanwhile, a fully centralized compliant network loses the spirit of encryption.
Pi Network’s answer is: bottom-layer anonymity, application-layer compliance—on-chain data is open and transparent, but all participants undergo real identity verification to meet anti-money laundering and tax requirements. This may be the most realistic path for Web3 to mainstream.
💡 Summary: Slow is Fast
Many early criticisms of Pi as "too centralized" and "KYC invading privacy" now seem outdated in today’s regulatory context. As Europe and America begin to expel anonymous coins and shut down non-compliant exchanges, Pi has quietly completed the most difficult infrastructure for identity verification. The core driver of the next bull market is likely not leverage but legitimacy. And Pi is standing at the starting line of this race.
#PiNetwork $PI
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