~snip~
If I may rephrase your answer, you're saying that you are committed to providing a no-KYC experience for your users. However, cases may arise in which you're left with no choice but to collect personal information. That may include names, addresses, phone numbers, IDs, pictures, and the like. It's because users' privacy isn't the only thing that matters; you also need to make sure that security and trustworthiness of your service are protected. There are also "unlikely scenario where legal obligations necessitate the collection of KYC information and its sharing with authorities." But you don't keep these KYC data yourself because you're using the services of KYCAID.