- Courts are increasingly treating exchange-held Bitcoin as seizable property.
- Centralized custody creates a single point of control regulators can act on.
- Self custody is shifting from preference to necessity for long-term holders.
South Korea’s Supreme Court quietly drew a very sharp line this week. Bitcoin held on centralized exchanges can be frozen or seized under criminal law, just like any other asset sitting inside a regulated financial institution. That ruling may sound local, but it isn’t. Similar legal pressure is building across the UK, parts of Europe, and other major jurisdictions at the same time. Different laws, same outcome. If your Bitcoin lives on an exchange, it is subject to someone else’s rules.

Exchanges Are Built for Enforcement
From a regulator’s point of view, exchanges are the easiest choke point imaginable. They have offices, compliance teams, customer records, and databases tied to real identities. That makes enforcement efficient. Jurisdiction doesn’t stop at borders when custody is centralized. Even if you live elsewhere, your assets are governed by where the exchange operates. If Bitcoin is sitting there, control is already shared, whether users admit it or not.

Self Custody Is No Longer a Lifestyle Choice
For a long time, self custody was framed as optional. Something for power users, early adopters, or people comfortable with hardware wallets and seed phrases. That framing no longer holds. The risk is no longer theoretical or edge-case. When custody sits with a third party, ownership becomes conditional. If self custody feels intimidating and you avoid it, you’re not avoiding risk, you’re accepting a different one.
What “Not Your Keys” Actually Means Now
The phrase “not your keys, not your crypto” used to sound ideological. Now it reads like a warning label. Centralized custody concentrates control, and control invites intervention. That doesn’t mean exchanges disappear or become unusable. It means they should be treated as tools, not vaults. Long-term storage on platforms designed for compliance is a mismatch.
Why This Isn’t Just a South Korea Story
This isn’t about one court or one headline. It’s about a global tightening around centralized points of control. Legal systems don’t need to coordinate for this trend to spread. They’re responding to the same incentives. If you cannot self custody, or choose not to learn, you are trusting that environment to remain friendly forever. History suggests that is a fragile bet.











