XRP court ruling marks milestone, but new crypto law could take years
Ripple’s partial victory against the SEC is positive, but crypto firms still face uncertainty without a regulatory framework.
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Ripple’s partial victory against the SEC is positive, but crypto firms still face uncertainty without a regulatory framework.
Securities and Exchange Commission Chair Gary Gensler is working to protect someone, but it’s not American investors.
Laws in the United States are the problem. Cryptocurrency advocates should focus on changing them — and, in the meantime, consider moving to the European Union.
SEC-regulated firm INX only lists five cryptocurrencies on its platform, considering them as non-securities.
Binance.US would have to transfer all U.S.-based assets to new wallets but would be allowed to pay its bills under a proposed consent order.
The 2018-era Gensler appeared much more lenient towards certain cryptocurrencies, including Ether.
A Supreme Court decision ruled that the U.S. president could not remove commissioners except for “standard of inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance.”
"U.S. capital markets must be protected from a tyrannical Chairman, including the current one," Congressman Warren Davis wrote in reference to SEC head Gary Gensler.
The SEC’s charges against Binance and Coinbase could have far-reaching consequences for decentralized finance.
Gensler argued that securities laws helped prevent stock market scams once they were passed in the 1930s and can benefit the crypto market of today.