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Korean Incubator Hashed Raises $200 Million for Web 3.0 Investments

Korean Incubator Hashed Raises 0 Million for Web 3.0 InvestmentsHashed, a Korean blockchain VC firm, has announced the launch of Hashed Venture Fund II, a new fund that will focus on investing in Web 3.0-based startups. The fund raised $200 million for these investments, and while the company did not disclose those who participated, it did announce it will be scaling operations to have […]

Crypto Comeback: VC Investments Soar 46% in Q4 2024

Infrastructure Provider Blockdaemon Raises $155 Million With Participation of Goldman Sachs

Infrastructure Provider Blockdaemon Raises 5 Million With Participation of Goldman SachsBlockdaemon, a blockchain infrastructure provider, has raised $155 million in its Series B funding round, which will aid its expansion plans to make acquisitions in the crypto infrastructure market. The funding round had the participation of Goldman Sachs, Softbank Vision Fund 2, Matrix Capital Management, Sapphire Ventures, and Morgan Creek Digital, among others. Blockdaemon Raises […]

Crypto Comeback: VC Investments Soar 46% in Q4 2024

Central Bank of Turkey Expands Research, Prepares to Test Digital Lira on New Platform

Central Bank of Turkey Expands Research, Prepares to Test Digital Lira on New PlatformThe Turkish central bank has established a new platform together with technology stakeholders to further the development of a digitalized version of the national fiat currency. The new collaboration will allow Turkey to focus on expanding research and conducting tests of the prospective digital lira. Turkey Sets Up Digital Lira Collaboration Platform The Central Bank […]

Crypto Comeback: VC Investments Soar 46% in Q4 2024

Dapper Labs and Flow Blockchain to Get a Boost From Big Tech as Studio Partners With Google

Dapper Labs and Flow Blockchain to Get a Boost From Big Tech as Studio Partners With GoogleGoogle is joining forces with the blockchain firm Dapper Labs in order to help bolster Web3 development, blockchain gaming, and non-fungible token (NFT) technology. The blockchain company’s CEO Roham Gharegozlou tweeted about the deal on Tuesday noting that the firm was “amped to welcome Google to the Flow blockchain.” Google to Collaborate With Dapper Labs […]

Crypto Comeback: VC Investments Soar 46% in Q4 2024

ICYMI: Innovation vs. the Infra Bill…

ICYMI is an ongoing series of blog posts memorializing important Twitter threads from thought leaders at Coinbase and beyond. In this thread from 08/06/2021 Brian talks about key moments for the future of crypto, including a recently proposed infrastructure bill.

A headshot of Brian Armstrong, Coinbase CEO, smiling in a black tee shirt
@brian_armstrong

There are a few key moments that define our future. One is happening now in the Senate w/ the infrastructure bill. At the 11th hour Mark Warner has proposed an amendment that would decide which foundational technologies are OK and which are not in crypto. This is disastrous.

Senator Mark Warner has asked for proof of stake validators to comply with the impossible, but not proof of work miners. [Read about the differences between proof of work and proof of stake here.] Why? It’s not clear, but we could find ourselves with the Senate deciding which types of crypto will survive government regulation.

This is the government trying to pick winners and losers in a nascent industry today, where some new technology is being developed every month. They are guaranteed to get it wrong, by writing in a few exceptions by hand today.

Imagine if the government decided that iOS is OK but Android isn’t. And that software developers building on iOS can thrive, but Android is outlawed.

Our Senators are voting tomorrow on the future of innovation in finance and crypto in America. If they choose the Sen. Mark Warner amendment, we will see future development of blockchain technology move offshore to countries like China that are currently embracing it.

Crypto is still in its early stages. Innovators across this country are working to make crypto networks better, enabling new apps like NFTs, smart contracts, and DeFi. These will bring enormous benefits to Americans, and help ensure our place as a financial hub.

If the U.S. fails to embrace the innovation happening in crypto, it risks becoming a financial backwater, missing out on one of the fastest growing sectors of the economy. Imagine if we had missed out on the internet, and the largest internet companies had been built overseas.

This debate in the Senate started because the govt sees the growing crypto industry as a source of tax revenue. We agree everyone must pay their taxes. There is no debate on this topic. But destroying some of the most exciting innovations in the process is unconscionable.

History will not be kind to any politician who tries to block American’s access to new technologies. Americans have a very low tolerance for taking away our rights, and harming economic growth.

Contact your Senators and urge them to vote for the Wyden-Lummis-Toomey amendment and vote NO on the Warner-Portman amendment. Let’s keep crypto alive and thriving, we’re just getting started.

In Emilie Choi’s Top of Mind email on 08/09/2021, she also referred readers to a thoughtful blog post on the same subject by Fred Wilson.

*We’ve added links where appropriate. You can see original thread here.


ICYMI: Innovation vs. the Infra Bill… was originally published in The Coinbase Blog on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.

Crypto Comeback: VC Investments Soar 46% in Q4 2024

Mark Cuban likens shutting off crypto growth to stopping e-commerce in 1995

Bitcoin proponent Mark Cuban is certainly not happy with the tighter rules for crypto businesses introduced in the new infrastructure bill.

Leaders in the crypto industry continue to speak up as the bipartisan $1 trillion infrastructure bill, known for implementing tighter rules on crypto businesses and expanding reporting requirements for brokers, passed the United States Senate. Billionaire investor and Bitcoin (BTC) proponent Mark Cuban is one of them.

Speaking to The Washington Post over the weekend, before the bill officially passed the senate, Cuban drew a parallel between the growth of crypto to the rise of e-commerce and the internet in general:

“Shutting off this growth engine would be the equivalent of stopping e-commerce in 1995 because people were afraid of credit card fraud. Or regulating the creation of websites because some people initially thought they were complicated and didn’t understand what they would ever amount to.”

Mark Cuban is a vocal advocate for crypto and decentralized finance. The Dallas Mavericks owner is known for enabling the Mavs to accept Bitcoin, Ether (ETH) and Dogecoin (DOGE) payments for tickets and merchandise items.

He also argued in May that crypto asset prices are increasingly reflective of real utility and demand and that the day will eventually come when crypto is “mature to the point we wondered how we ever lived without.”

Related: Senators introduce pro-crypto amendment to infrastructure bill; industry says it's not enough

On Tuesday morning, the U.S. Senate passed the controversial bill in a 69–30 vote. The bill's main focus is roughly $1 trillion in funding for roads, bridges and major infrastructure projects.

However, the bill caused serious concerns among the crypto ecosystem as it would implement tighter rules on crypto businesses, expand reporting requirements for brokers and mandate that digital asset transactions worth more than $10,000 are reported to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).

Senator Pat Toomey, who was among the lawmakers that have written an amendment to the infrastructure bill to exclude certain crypto companies from the reporting requirements for brokers, said the new legislation imposes “a badly flawed, and in some cases unworkable, cryptocurrency tax reporting mandate that threatens future technological innovation.”

Crypto Comeback: VC Investments Soar 46% in Q4 2024

US Senator claims support for crypto amendments despite blocking bill

Senator Shelby claims he supported the cryptocurrency provisions of the amendment to the infrastructure bill that his sole objection blocked from passing the senate.

On July 29, Cointelegraph reported that provisions had been hastily added to the infrastructure bill that sought to raise $28 billion through expanded taxation and impose stringent third-party reporting requirements for any entity deemed to comprise a cryptocurrency “broker.”

The provision’s broad language sent shockwaves across the crypto community, with onlookers noting that software developers, hardware wallet providers, and miners and other network validators would likely be classified as brokers and required to report information on counterparty network participants that they are unable to collect.

Taking to Twitter yesterday, Senator Richard Shelby expressed support for the amendment put forward by senators Pat Toomey, Cynthia Lummis, Rob Portman, Mark Warner, Ron Wyden, and Kyrsten Sinema that would have exempted software developers, transaction validators and node operators from the third-party reporting requirements.

Despite his stated support, Shelby asserted he objected to the amendment over his dissatisfaction with the defense spending allocations contained in the legislation.

Richard Shelby, the 87-year-old Republican senator whose sole objection led to the bi-partisan infrastructure bill passing through the Senate without amendment on Aug. 10, has revealed he actually supported changes to the bill’s cryptocurrency provisions that his vote ultimately blocked.

The crypto community has slammed Shelby for his actions, with the comments to his post nearly exclusively populated with angry outpourings from crypto-natives.

Twitter-user David Zell noted that Shelby’s largest donors from 2015 until 200 were commercial banks and firms representing the securities and investments sector — which donated more than $870,000 to Shelby over the period.

Jake Chervinsky, general counsel to Compound Finance, also criticized Shelby, highlighting that the Senator is retiring at the end of his term.

Related: ‘We’ll be back on this’ — Alabama senator derails crypto amendment with two words

Despite the popular amendment failing to pass the Senate, Chervinsky offered that it is “very unlikely” DeFi developers will be targeted under the infrastructure bill’s original language.

The bill must now pass through the House of Representatives, which is in recess until September 20.

Crypto Comeback: VC Investments Soar 46% in Q4 2024

Three US Senators propose narrowing crypto tax language in infrastructure bill

“While Congress works to better understand and legislate on issues surrounding the development and transaction of cryptocurrencies, it should be wary of imposing burdensome regulations that may stifle innovation,” said Senator Pat Toomey.

Lawmakers have written an amendment to an infrastructure bill in the U.S. Senate which proposes excluding certain crypto companies from the reporting requirements for brokers.

In an amendment from Oregon Senator Ron Wyden on behalf of himself and Wyoming Senator Cynthia Lummis and with the support of Pennsylvania Senator Pat Toomey, the U.S. lawmakers suggested that some of the provisions in the bipartisan infrastructure deal not apply to developers in the crypto space, miners, and blockchain firms. Specifically, the amendment proposes the definition of a broker not include anyone in the business of “validating distributed ledger transactions,” “developing digital assets or their corresponding protocols,” and dealing with mining software or hardware.

“By clarifying the definition of broker, our amendment will ensure non-financial intermediaries like miners, network validators, and other service providers are not subject to the reporting requirements specified in the bipartisan infrastructure package,” said Toomey on Twitter.

He added:

“While Congress works to better understand and legislate on issues surrounding the development and transaction of cryptocurrencies, it should be wary of imposing burdensome regulations that may stifle innovation.”

According to majority leader Chuck Schumer, the Senate is planning to vote on multiple amendments to the infrastructure bill, HR 3684, today. Among other things, the bill proposes implementing tighter rules on businesses handling cryptocurrencies, expanding reporting requirements for brokers, and mandating that digital asset transactions worth more than $10,000 are reported to the Internal Revenue Service.

However, the proposed amendment from Wyden, Lummis, and Toomey could potentially strike down some of the reporting requirements should crypto firms not be considered “brokers” in the bill. According to the trio, nothing in the proposed amendment has any effect on some of the existing laws governing cryptocurrencies, including the Securities Act of 1933 and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.

Related: Ohio senator wants clarity for crypto tax reporting in proposed bill

Ohio Senator Rob Portman, one of the lawmakers behind HR 3684, said on Twitter yesterday that the legislation “does not impose new reporting requirements on software developers, crypto miners, node operators or other non-brokers.” Calling the section on brokers as a “common-sense provision,” Portman claimed that crypto firms simply “must comply with standard information reporting obligations.”

Related: Elizabeth Warren compares 'bogus' crypto to 'legitimate' CBDCs in senate hearing

The Blockchain Association, Coinbase, Coin Center, Ribbit Capital, and Square expressed their support for the proposed amendment today, releasing a joint statement that the infrastructure bill’s language on crypto “would place unworkable requirements on a nascent industry.” The companies suggested lawmakers get public feedback given the potential impact on the U.S. economy.

“Clarifying the provision to address our concerns would not affect the reporting requirements on crypto exchanges that operate on behalf of customers,” said the companies. ”We support sensible reporting requirements that are consistent with those that apply to traditional financial services.”

The U.S. Senate is scheduled to be in recess starting on Aug. 9, meaning it may be unlikely to address all the amendments to the infrastructure bill — or pass the legislation itself — until it reconvenes in September.

Crypto Comeback: VC Investments Soar 46% in Q4 2024

Central Bank of Sweden Invites Financial Market Actors for Second Phase of E-krona Pilot

Central Bank of Sweden Invites Financial Market Actors for Second Phase of E-krona PilotSveriges Riksbank, the central bank of Sweden, will carry out the next stage of its e-krona project with the help of two organizations from the financial sector. The move signals a transition from the initial in-house testing with simulated participants to cooperation with real, external partners. Riksbank to Work With Handelsbanken and Tietoevry to Test […]

Crypto Comeback: VC Investments Soar 46% in Q4 2024