Budgeting isn’t about restricting your lifestyle—it’s about gaining control over your money so you can live on your own terms. In a world where inflation, subscriptions, and unexpected costs are everywhere, a working budget is your financial safety net.

Trump’s cyber strategy vows to ‘support the security’ of cryptocurrencies and blockchain

This places blockchain security in the context of national technology competition alongside AI and quantum computing.

Mar 7, 2026, 7:46 p.m.

The Trump administration’s new national cyber strategy places the security of cryptocurrencies and blockchain technologies within the United States’ broader push to maintain leadership in emerging technology.

In a section focused on maintaining “superiority in critical and emerging technologies,” the document states that the government will support the security of “cryptocurrencies and blockchain technologies.”

The statement appears in President Trump’s Cyber Strategy for America, which outlines six policy pillars meant to guide federal cyber policy, including securing infrastructure, modernizing federal networks and strengthening U.S. advantages in areas such as artificial intelligence and quantum computing.

“We will build secure technologies and supply chains that protect user privacy from design to deployment, including supporting the security of cryptocurrencies and blockchain technologies. We will promote the adoption of post-quantum cryptography and secure quantum computing,” according to the document.

“And we will secure the AI technology stack—including our data centers—and promote innovation in AI security,” the document added.

By placing blockchain security alongside AI and post-quantum cryptography, the strategy frames decentralized financial infrastructure as part of the nation’s technology competition with foreign rivals.

The strategy does not introduce specific crypto regulations. Still, the language signals that federal policymakers see securing blockchain systems as part of protecting economic and technological leadership.

Still, it further underscores the Trump administration’s commitment to the cryptocurrency space (which came under scrutiny recently), a commitment he has supported since his 2024 campaign.

In July of that year, Trump addressed the Bitcoin 2024 conference in Nashville, promising to make the United States the “crypto capital of the planet” and a “Bitcoin superpower.” He pledged to end what he described as an anti-crypto regulatory push and proposed creating a national Bitcoin stockpile.

In early 2025, he directed the creation of a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve using seized bitcoin and launched a presidential working group on digital assets, while prohibiting a U.S. central bank digital currency (although a year has passed, and there’s still no reserve). Later that year, he promoted stablecoin legislation known as the GENIUS Act and continued to push for broader market-structure rules for the industry.

He has also eliminated various Biden-era anti-crypto policies and has seen U.S. lawmakers drop cases against major cryptocurrency firms, including Uniswap, Tron, Coinbase, and Binance.

AI Disclaimer: Parts of this article were generated with the assistance from AI tools and reviewed by our editorial team to ensure accuracy and adherence to our standards. For more information, see CoinDesk’s full AI Policy.

More For You

basic

CoinDesk Research looks into how Pudgy Penguins disrupts traditional toys market via a phygital model. With 2M+ units sold, they scale via global partnerships and events.

What to know:

  • Disrupting a Stagnant Market: Pudgy Penguins is utilizing a “Negative CAC” model to challenge the traditional $31.7B licensed toy industry by treating physical merchandise as a profitable user acquisition tool rather than just a final product.

View Full Report

More For You

Clarity Act will benefit banks more than crypto, former CFTC chair says

J. Christopher Giancarlo, Former Chairman, U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Willkie Farr & Gallagher (Shutterstock/CoinDesk)

Former CFTC Chair Christopher Giancarlo says banks, more than crypto firms, need the stalled Digital Asset Market Clarity Act.

What to know:

  • Former CFTC Chair Christopher Giancarlo said banks need the stalled Digital Asset Market Clarity Act more than crypto firms.
  • Passage of the bill will provide the regulatory certainty required to invest in new digital payment infrastructure.
  • The bill is stuck on whether crypto firms can pay rewards to stablecoin holders, which banks fear could spur capital flight.
  • Giancarlo said there’s a risk activity will shift to Europe and Asia, and he put the bill’s chances of passing at roughly 60-40 after missing a White House deadline.

Read full story

Read More

Follow us

Categories

Recent Blogs