Share this article

Coinbase Leaps Into Supreme Court Case in Defense of User Data Going to IRS

The U.S. crypto exchange filed a brief in a longstanding privacy battle over records the tax agency sought on customers' crypto transactions.

Updated Apr 30, 2025, 5:04 p.m. Published Apr 30, 2025, 3:00 p.m.
Coinbase appeared again in the U.S. Supreme Court to make a case on arbitration. (Jesse Hamilton/CoinDesk)
Coinbase has weighed in on a U.S. Supreme Court tussle over crypto users' privacy. (Jesse Hamilton/CoinDesk)

What to know:

  • U.S. crypto exchange Coinbase made an argument in a U.S. Supreme Court privacy case based in an original 2016 request from the Internal Revenue Service for customers' transaction records.
  • The company says the government overreached when seeking data on hundreds of thousands of users, and it argues the matter has wider privacy implications.

Coinbase (COIN) filed a brief in the U.S. Supreme Court case involving an Internal Revenue Service request for data on hundreds of thousands of its customers back in 2016, arguing the court should "protect Americans' privacy interests in digital information stored by third-party service providers."

The U.S. tax agency — in an action during the first administration of President Donald Trump — had been seeking financial records under the stance that the individuals's transaction records should be made available once they'd shared their information with a third party. In this instance, that party was Coinbase. The exchange fought to narrow the request through court battles and eventually was compelled to deliver a much narrower scope of data.

STORY CONTINUES BELOW
Don't miss another story.Subscribe to the State of Crypto Newsletter today. See all newsletters

"The court should intervene to clarify that the third-party doctrine does not allow the IRS to conduct dragnet searches," Coinbase contended in its amicus brief filed on Wednesday in the case that has wide privacy implications.

In 2020, one of the customers, James Harper, a Bitcoin researcher, filed a lawsuit against the IRS, accusing it of improper overreach in its demand for records. Years later, Harper — a lawyer and fellow and the American Enterprise Institute — has his argument before the high court.

"User anonymity vanishes — and the blockchain becomes susceptible to easy surveillance — when the government acquires information that allows it to match a public key or wallet address to a user’s identity," Coinbase noted.

"This John Doe summons invaded a sphere in which over 14,000 Americans had a reasonable expectation of privacy against a warrantless IRS trawl for extensive personal and financial information," the company argued.

Representing the government's case, the Department of Justice had previously argued that "a person lacks a reasonable expectation of privacy in information voluntarily provided to a third party, including bank records pertaining to him."

Read More: How a Lawsuit Against the IRS Is Trying to Expand Privacy for Crypto Users

Більше для вас

Protocol Research: GoPlus Security

GP Basic Image

Що варто знати:

  • As of October 2025, GoPlus has generated $4.7M in total revenue across its product lines. The GoPlus App is the primary revenue driver, contributing $2.5M (approx. 53%), followed by the SafeToken Protocol at $1.7M.
  • GoPlus Intelligence's Token Security API averaged 717 million monthly calls year-to-date in 2025 , with a peak of nearly 1 billion calls in February 2025. Total blockchain-level requests, including transaction simulations, averaged an additional 350 million per month.
  • Since its January 2025 launch , the $GPS token has registered over $5B in total spot volume and $10B in derivatives volume in 2025. Monthly spot volume peaked in March 2025 at over $1.1B , while derivatives volume peaked the same month at over $4B.

Більше для вас

State of Crypto: Wrapping Up the Month

U.S. Congress (Jesse Hamilton/CoinDesk)

Congress continues to make progress on crypto issues but things are moving slowly.