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I have to admit I don't fully understand the Bitcoin protocol. But from what I do understand, transactions are traceable -- it is the main reason decentralization works: the world can watch and confirm that a transaction is legit.
Why then can't we observe when a thief tries to cash out or otherwise exchange a Bitcoin that we know to have been stolen?
1 out of every 14 Bitcoins is now stolen property, and there are plenty of laws governing stolen property.
What am I missing here? With so many Bitcoins identified as "stolen," why can't they be traced, recovered and returned to their rightful owner?
This is a bit like a mixing service. But you never know if the mixing service isn't keeping records which could link your input and your output to the exchange. However, the exchanges get now (5 years later) more and more regulated so you need to switch to decentral exchanges in order to protect privacy. – tempo – 2019-11-17T00:17:48.493
1You don't even need to exchange to altcoins then back. Just move BTC into btc-e then withdraw and it is already untraceable because for whatever reason btc-e pays from a random address in their hot wallet pool. – uminatsu – 2014-03-06T04:30:15.683