Why DeFi remains niche and what might get it out of its market rut

Today, decentralized finance (DeFi) is still something of a “Wild West.” With many different players, each with their own claims and ambitions, there is no obvious law of the land.

Unfortunately, this has resulted in some DeFi users being dealt a bad hand after they decided to experiment with the ecosystem. Stories of scams and rug pulls are still common and algorithmic protocols coming undone by negative market conditions disturb the users’ trust. DeFi can seem unsafe and confusing for many users, even when projects and the teams behind them have the best of intentions.

It doesn’t help that regulators are, in many jurisdictions, dragging their feet on clear rules or enforcement surrounding the DeFi sector. Though it took years for the first signs of legislation to emerge, the growth of DeFi has finally drawn the attention of lawmakers across the world. However, the jury is still out on how strict or flexible the laws may be.

The combination of risky services and an unregulated environment has understandably kept many suspicious of the crypto community. Both retail investors and institutions are wary of DeFi and don’t fully understand it. The question of the hour is, when and how will we get to a point where DeFi can be embraced by people other than crypto’s so-called “degens”?

One step that could be massive for appeasing regulators and would-be investors is the introduction of decentralized identities. Various actors can be tracked within the DeFi space using decentralized IDs. While crypto purists and privacy advocates may frown at the idea, decentralized IDs can address regulators’ requirements and alleviate the concerns of investors while not infringing on individual privacy rights.

How decentralized IDs work

The very technology that DeFi is built upon also offers a solution to the current roadblock. The solution comes in the form of decentralized identities, or DIDs. By leveraging blockchains, smart contracts and non-fungible tokens (NFTs), decentralized identities can offer accurate information to lawmakers but also preserve the sovereignty and privacy of users.

It is possible owing to a few different aspects of the crypto infrastructure, with NFTs delivering particular value. An NFT acts as an asset that can have any type of data encoded into it and is verifiably unique from all other assets, complete with its own history. Nobody can fake or alter an NFT because of the underlying decentralized protocols.

For a true digital identity, more is understandably needed. There also needs to be accountability and certainty surrounding the ownership and of decentralized identities. To this end, verification of one’s physical identity can be linked to their DID. There are multiple ways this could be done, including biometric data, explicitly verifiable real-world documents, or similar confirmations. By linking all this information together in an NFT, an unfalsifiable profile can be created.