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The Supreme Court could stop the SEC’s war on crypto

Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett are among a group on the Supreme Court who may not smile upon the SEC’s interpretation of the law.

When the leaders of the American Revolution signed the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776, they had no guarantee of victory. The battle for independence was underway, and their prospects were uncertain. Despite occasional victories, these audacious freedom fighters were grossly outnumbered and had difficulty retaining volunteer soldiers. Their commitment to the cause of freedom was their only fighting chance.

Cryptocurrency as an open-source software industry is in a similar predicament. The United States Securities and Exchange Commission and banking regulators are trying to dismantle this budding industry, brandishing lawsuits and an intimidating array of regulatory measures designed to make compliance impossible.

Crypto’s fighting chance is embedded within the very words and legal principles put forth by America’s founders in the Constitution. They designed the Constitution on the principle of the separation of powers inspired by the Enlightenment. Their vision was of a system with three separate but coequal branches of government, each acting as a safeguard against the potential abuse of power by the others.

Coinbase stands at the vanguard in the modern battlefield of cryptocurrency as it stares down a lawsuit brought by the SEC. In June, the company delivered a declaration in response to the lawsuit that leans on the “major questions doctrine.” This essential legal principle holds agencies like the SEC accountable when they circumvent Congress’ role in our constitutional structure and manipulate vague and antiquated statutes for their own ends.

Related: Elizabeth Warren wants the police at your door in 2024

In recent landmark cases that curbed executive overreach in both the Obama and Biden administrations, the Supreme Court has underscored the importance of the major questions doctrine. This doctrine underlines the crucial point that when agencies attempt to regulate questions of significant national or political importance, they must have explicit authorization from Congress.

This doctrine is not new nor untested. When the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) attempted to regulate cigarettes, justifying action by defining them under the FDA’s authority over drugs, the Supreme Court struck down the agency’s overreach. The court pointed out that nicotine, while technically a drug, did not fall under the palliative class of drugs Congress had intended when creating the FDA.

A similar verdict was reached regarding the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) attempt to regulate carbon emissions. The EPA was prevented from broadening its mandate over power plant pollution to set a national policy on carbon emissions, which was beyond its remit and would usurp the role of the legislature.

The Supreme Court’s decision striking down Biden’s student loan forgiveness program is the most recent invocation of the major questions doctrine. Coinbase general counsel Paul Grewal astutely observed that one could substitute crypto for student loans in the court’s ruling and envision a similar outcome.

SEC Chairman Gary Gensler’s apologists argue that the securities laws from the 1930s have successfully adapted to the internet era, hence they can adapt to crypto as well. This argument would carry weight if the SEC made similar adaptations to crypto as they did to the internet.

Over the years, the SEC has proven its capacity to evolve, allowing prospectus delivery over the internet and sanctioning executive communications through social media. But when it comes to crypto, the SEC stubbornly insists that developers must comply with laws that, without nuanced adaptation, are impossible to adhere to.

This grudging approach of “just come in and register” while blatantly ignoring the numerous questions raised in Coinbase’s 2022 request for rulemaking is exactly why the major questions doctrine — as interpreted by Justices Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett — is so relevant to the SEC’s approach to crypto regulation. The doctrine acts as a constitutional compass, guiding the direction of authority, and restraining overreach by various agencies.

Related: Gary Gensler is hurting the little guys for Wall Street

The framers of the Constitution left us an arsenal of tools to wage a revolution for freedom within the design of the U.S. Constitution. Legal scholars and constitutionalists, including Gorsuch, are reviving the founders’ vision of a delicate balance of power among the three branches with the major questions doctrine.

Crypto defendants, such as Coinbase, Ripple and Binance, are pioneering a revolution of their own. They are at the forefront of a movement aiming to decentralize power, shifting it from centralized institutions to the hands of individuals. In their struggle, they are armed with the very same tools our founders used to shape this nation.

There’s a striking parallel between our founders’ fight for political freedom and the current struggle for financial freedom in the digital realm. The underpinnings of both these movements are deeply rooted in a quest for autonomy and liberty.

J.W. Verret is an associate professor at George Mason University’s Antonin Scalia Law School. He is a practicing crypto forensic accountant and also practices securities law at Lawrence Law LLC. He is a member of the Financial Accounting Standards Board’s Advisory Council and a former member of the SEC Investor Advisory Committee. He also leads the Crypto Freedom Lab, a think tank fighting for policy change to preserve freedom and privacy for crypto developers and users.

This article is for general information purposes and is not intended to be and should not be taken as legal or investment advice. The views, thoughts and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

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Supreme Court Sides With Coinbase in First-Ever Crypto Company Case To Reach the Top Level of the US Judiciary

Supreme Court Sides With Coinbase in First-Ever Crypto Company Case To Reach the Top Level of the US Judiciary

Coinbase, the largest crypto exchange in the US, has won a Supreme Court ruling, allowing the company to pause deliberation of a lawsuit and move the proceedings into private arbitration. While it may not have direct implications on crypto, the victory marks the first of any digital asset firm in a Supreme Court ruling. The […]

The post Supreme Court Sides With Coinbase in First-Ever Crypto Company Case To Reach the Top Level of the US Judiciary appeared first on The Daily Hodl.

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Homeowner Who Accused Government of Seizing Her Home And Stealing the Profit Wins Supreme Court Case

Homeowner Who Accused Government of Seizing Her Home And Stealing the Profit Wins Supreme Court Case

The Supreme Court has sided with a 94 year-old woman who accused the government of violating the constitution by forcibly selling her property and keeping the profit. Geraldine Tyler took her dispute with a county in Minnesota to the high court after the local government kept a $25,000 profit from selling her condo in a […]

The post Homeowner Who Accused Government of Seizing Her Home And Stealing the Profit Wins Supreme Court Case appeared first on The Daily Hodl.

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What is fair use? US Supreme Court weighs in on AI’s copyright dilemma

Many firms with generative AI models are being sued for copyright infringement, and the Supreme Court may have just ruined their primary legal defense.

Generative artificial intelligence models such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT are trained by being fed giant amounts of data, but what happens when this data is copyrighted?

Well, the defendants in a variety of lawsuits currently making their way through the courts claim that the process infringes upon their copyright protections.

For example, on Feb. 3, stock photo provider Getty Images sued artificial intelligence firm Stability AI, alleging that it copied over 12 million photos from its collections as part of an effort to build a competing business. It notes in the filing:

“On the back of intellectual property owned by Getty Images and other copyright holders, Stability AI has created an image-generating model called Stable Diffusion that uses artificial intelligence to deliver computer-synthesized images in response to text prompts.”

While the European Commission and other regions are scrambling to develop regulations to keep up with the rapid development of AI, the question of whether training AI models using copyrighted works classifies as an infringement may be decided in court cases such as this one.

The question is a hot topic, and in a May 16 Senate Judiciary Committee hearing, United States Senator Marsha Blackburn grilled OpenAI CEO Sam Altman about the issue.

While Altman noted that “creators deserve control over how their creations are used,” he refrained from committing not to train ChatGPT to use copyrighted works without consent, instead suggesting that his firm was working with creators to ensure they are compensated in some way.

AI companies argue “transformative use”

AI companies generally argue that their models do not infringe on copyright laws because they transform the original work, therefore qualifying as fair use — at least under U.S. laws.

“Fair use” is a doctrine in the U.S. that allows for limited use of copyrighted data without the need to acquire permission from the copyright holder.

Some of the key factors considered when determining whether the use of copyrighted material classifies as fair use include the purpose of the use — particularly, whether it’s being used for commercial gain — and whether it threatens the livelihood of the original creator by competing with their works.

The Supreme Court’s Warhol opinion

On May 18, the Supreme Court of the United States, considering these factors, issued an opinion that may play a significant role in the future of generative AI.

The ruling in Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts v. Goldsmith found that famous artist Andy Warhol’s 1984 work “Orange Prince” infringed on the rights of rock photographer Lynn Goldsmith, as the work was intended to be used commercially and, therefore, could not be covered by the fair use exemption.

While the ruling doesn’t change copyright law, it does clarify how transformative use is defined. 

Mitch Glazier, chairman and CEO of the Recording Industry Association of America — a music advocacy organization — was thankful for the decision, noting that “claims of ‘transformative use’ cannot undermine the basic rights given to all creators under the Copyright Act.”

Given that many AI companies are selling access to their AI models after training them using creators’ works, the argument that they are transforming the original works and therefore qualify for the fair use exemption may have been rendered ineffective by the decision.

It is worth noting that there is no clear consensus, however.

In a May 23 article, Jon Baumgarten — a former general counsel at the U.S. Copyright Office who participated in the formation of the Copyright Act — said the case highlights that the question of fair use depends on many factors and argued that the current general counsel’s blanket assertion that generative AI is fair use “is over-generalized, oversimplified and unduly conclusory.”

A safer path?

The legal question marks surrounding generative AI models trained using copyrighted works have prompted some firms to heavily restrict the data going into their models.

For example, on May 23, software firm Adobe announced the launch of a generative AI model called Generative Fill, which allows Photoshop users to “create extraordinary imagery from a simple text prompt.”

An example of Generative Fill’s capabilities. Source: Adobe

While the product is similar to Stability AI’s Stable Diffusion, the AI model powering Generative Fill is trained using only stock photos from its own database, which — according to Adobe — helps ensure it “won’t generate content based on other people’s work, brands, or intellectual property.”

Related: Microsoft urges lawmakers, companies to ‘step up’ with AI guardrails

This may be the safer path from a legal perspective, but AI models are only as good as the data fed into them, so ChatGPT and other popular AI tools would not be as accurate or useful as they are today if they had not scraped vast amounts of data from the web.

So, while creators might be emboldened by the recent Warhol decision — and there is no question that their works should be protected by copyright law — it is worth considering what its broader effect might be.

If generative AI models can only be trained using copyright-free data, what kind of effect will that have on innovation and productivity growth?

After all, productivity growth is considered by many to be the single most significant contributor to raising the standard of living for a country’s citizens, as highlighted in a famous quote from prominent economist Paul Krugman in his 1994 book The Age of Diminished Expectations:

“Productivity isn't everything, but in the long run it is almost everything. A country’s ability to improve its standard of living over time depends almost entirely on its ability to raise its output per worker.”

Magazine: Crypto City: Guide to Osaka, Japan’s second-biggest city

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Hong Kong Judge Rules Crypto Assets as ‘Property,’ Following Similar Rulings Worldwide

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Bitcoin Profits Deemed Taxable by Denmark’s Supreme Court

Bitcoin Profits Deemed Taxable by Denmark’s Supreme CourtProfits from the sale of cryptocurrencies like bitcoin are taxable, according to two rulings by the Supreme Court of Denmark. The verdicts in the cases, which involve crypto purchases and payments as well as income received from bitcoin mining, uphold decisions of lower courts. Denmark’s High Court Considers Crypto Gains Taxable Under Current Law Profits […]

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Trade group accuses SEC of ‘stealthy’ overreach in Coinbase insider trading case

The Chamber of Digital Commerce has accused the SEC of trying to impose securities regulations via the “back door” of an insider trading lawsuit.

The United States Securities and Exchange Commission has again been accused of overstepping its authority and unfairly labeling crypto assets as securities, this time in its insider trading case against ex-Coinbase employees.

In an amicus brief filing on Feb. 22, the U.S.-based Chamber of Digital Commerce argued the case should be dismissed as it represented an expansion of the SEC’s “regulation by enforcement” campaign and seeks to characterize secondary market transactions as securities transactions.

“This case represents a stealthy, yet dramatic and unprecedented effort to expand the SEC’s jurisdictional reach and threatens the health of the U.S. marketplace for digital assets,” wrote Perianne Boring, founder and CEO of the Chamber of Digital Commerce.

The Chamber highlighted the “SEC’s encroachment into the digital assets market” was never authorized by Congress, and noted in other Supreme Court cases it has been ruled that regulators must first be granted authority by Congress.

“By acting without Congressional authorization, [the SEC] continues to contribute to a chaotic regulatory environment, harming the very investors it is charged to protect,” it wrote on Twitter.

The Chamber also argued that in bringing claims of securities fraud, the SEC was essentially asking the court to uphold that secondary market trades in the nine digital assets mentioned in an insider trading case against a former Coinbase employee constitute securities transactions, which it suggested was “problematic.”

“We have serious concerns about [the SEC’s] attempt to label these tokens as securities in the context of an enforcement action against third parties who had nothing to do with creating, distributing or marketing those assets,” Perianne added.

The Chamber cited the LBRY v SEC case in its brief, in which the judge had ruled that secondary market transactions would not be designated as securities transactions.

The judge had been persuaded by a paper from commercial contract attorney Lewis Cohen, which pointed out that no court had ever acknowledged the underlying asset was a security at any point since the landmark SEC v W. J. Howey Co. ruling — a case which set the precedent for determining whether a security transaction exists.

The latest amicus brief follows a similar filing from advocacy group the Blockchain Association on Feb. 13, which also argued that the SEC had exceeded its authority in the case and claimed it was “the latest salvo in the SEC’s apparent ongoing strategy of regulation by enforcement in the digital assets space.”

Related: Gary Gensler’s SEC is playing a game, but not the one you think

An amicus brief is filed by an amicus curiae, or “friend of the court,” which is an individual or organization not involved with a case but can assist the court by offering relevant information or insight.

The SEC in July sued former Coinbase Global product manager Ishan Wahi, brother Nikhil Wahi, and associate Sameer Ramani, alleging that the trio had used confidential information obtained by Ishan to make $1.5 million in gains from trading 25 different cryptocurrencies.

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Belarusian Fined $1 Million for Illegal Crypto Trading

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SBF reportedly files new bail application in the Bahamas Supreme Court

Bahamas media reports that Sam Bankman-Fried lodged a new bid for bail just two days after a judge denied his previous application and called the FTX founder a flight risk.

Sam Bankman-Fried, the jailed founder of bankrupt cryptocurrency exchange FTX has reportedly filed a new application for bail in the Bahamas Supreme Court following his previous unsuccessful bail bid.

Local media on Dec. 15 reported the founder submitted the application and that it would be heard before the court in just over one month's time on Jan. 17, 2023. However it did not cite any sources.

Previously, on Dec. 13, Bankman-Fried’s lawyers had argued for him to be let out on bail set at $250,000 as he had no prior convictions and was suffering from depression and insomnia. The presiding judge denied bail calling the crypto executive a flight risk.

Bankman-Fried is remanded at Fox Hill Prison, the only jail in the Bahamas. A 2021 United States State Department report said conditions at Fox Hill were “harsh” and overcrowded with poor medical care, sanitation and nutrition. Correctional officers were alleged to physically abuse detainees.

Related: FTX Bahamas co-CEO Ryan Salame blew the whistle on FTX and Sam Bankman-Fried

Extradition to the U.S. is on the cards as the Bahamian government has said it will “promptly” process any extradition request as the exchange founder faces eight charges including money laundering, wire fraud, and securities fraud.

The slew of charges could see Bankman-Fried land in jail for 115 years, but legal commentators have told Cointelegraph there is a "lot to play out" saying the case could take years until it's resolved.

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A Supreme Court case could kill Facebook and other socials — allowing blockchain to replace them

If the Supreme Court decides to strike down Section 230, it's going to become considerably more difficult for centralized social media companies to operate.

The internet — arguably the greatest invention in human history — has gone awry. We can all feel it. It is harder than ever to tell if we are engaging with friends or foes (or bots), we know we are being constantly surveilled in the name of better ad conversion, and we live in constant fear of clicking something and being defrauded.

The failures of the internet largely stem from the inability of large tech monopolies — particularly Google and Facebook — to verify and protect our identities. Why don’t they?

The answer is that they have no incentive to do so. In fact, the status quo suits them, thanks to Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, passed by the United States Congress in 1996.

Related: Nodes are going to dethrone tech giants — from Apple to Google

But things may be about to change. This term, the Supreme Court will hear Gonzalez v. Google, a case that has the potential to reshape or even eliminate Section 230. It is hard to envision a scenario where it wouldn't kill the social media platforms we use today. That would present a golden opportunity for blockchain technology to replace them.

How did we get here?

A key facilitator of the internet’s early development, Section 230 states that web platforms are not legally liable for content posted by their users. As a result, social media networks like Facebook and Twitter are free to publish (and profit from) anything their users post.

The plaintiff in the case now before the court believes internet platforms bear responsibility for the death of his daughter, who was killed by Islamic State-affiliated attackers in a Paris restaurant in 2015. He believes algorithms developed by YouTube and its parent company Google “recommended ISIS videos to users,” thereby driving the terrorist organization’s recruitment and ultimately facilitating the Paris attack.

Section 230 gives YouTube a lot of cover. If defamatory, or in the above case, violent content is posted by a user, the platform can serve that content to many consumers before any action is taken. In the process of determining if the content violates the law or the platform’s terms, a lot of damage can be done. But Section 230 shields the platform.

Related: Crypto is breaking the Google-Amazon-Apple monopoly on user data

Imagine a YouTube after Section 230 is struck down. Does it have to put the 500 hours of content that are uploaded every minute into a review queue before any other human is allowed to watch it? That wouldn’t scale and would remove a lot of the attractive immediacy of the content on the site. Or would they just let the content get published as it is now but assume legal liability for every copyright infringement, incitement to violence or defamatory word uttered in one of its billions of videos?

Once you pull the Section 230 thread, platforms like YouTube start to unravel quickly.

Global implications for the future of social media

The case is focused on a U.S. law, but the issues it raises are global. Other countries are also grappling with how best to regulate internet platforms, particularly social media. France recently ordered manufacturers to install easily accessible parental controls in all computers and devices and outlawed the collection of minors’ data for commercial purposes. In the United Kingdom, Instagram’s algorithm was officially found to be a contributor to the suicide of a teenage girl.

Then there are the world’s authoritarian regimes, whose governments are intensifying censorship and manipulation efforts by leveraging armies of trolls and bots to sow disinformation and mistrust. The lack of any workable form of ID verification for the vast majority of social media accounts makes this situation not just possible but inevitable.

And the beneficiaries of an economy without Section 230 may not be whom you’d expect. Many more individuals will bring suits against the major tech platforms. In a world where social media could be held legally liable for content posted on their platforms, armies of editors and content moderators would need to be assembled to review every image or word posted on their sites. Considering the volume of content that has been posted on social media in recent decades, the task seems almost impossible and would likely be a win for traditional media organizations.

Looking out a little further, Section 230’s demise would completely upend the business models that have driven the growth of social media. Platforms would suddenly be liable for an almost limitless supply of user-made content while ever-stronger privacy laws squeeze their ability to collect massive amounts of user data. It will require a total re-engineering of the social media concept.

Many misunderstand platforms like Twitter and Facebook. They think the software they use to log in to those platforms, post content, and see content from their network is the product. It is not. The moderation is the product. And if the Supreme Court overturns Section 230, that completely changes the products we think of as social media.

This is a tremendous opportunity.

In 1996, the internet consisted of a relatively small number of static websites and message boards. It was impossible to predict that its growth would one day cause people to question the very concepts of freedom and safety.

People have fundamental rights in their digital activities just as much as in their physical ones — including privacy. At the same time, the common good demands some mechanism to sort facts from misinformation, and honest people from scammers, in the public sphere. Today’s internet meets neither of these needs.

Some argue, either openly or implicitly, that a saner and healthier digital future requires hard tradeoffs between privacy and security. But if we’re ambitious and intentional in our efforts, we can achieve both.

Related: Facebook and Twitter will soon be obsolete thanks to blockchain technology

Blockchains make it possible to protect and prove our identities simultaneously. Zero-knowledge technology means we can verify information — age, for instance, or professional qualification—without revealing any corollary data. Soulbound Tokens (SBTs), Decentralized Identifiers (DIDs) and some forms of nonfungible tokens (NFTs) will soon enable a person to port a single, cryptographically provable identity across any digital platform, current or future.

This is good for us all, whether in our work, personal, or family lives. Schools and social media will be safer places, adult content can be reliably age-restricted, and deliberate misinformation will be easier to trace.

The end of Section 230 would be an earthquake. But if we adopt a constructive approach, it can also be a golden chance to improve the internet we know and love. With our identities established and cryptographically proven on-chain, we can better prove who we are, where we stand, and whom we can trust.

Nick Dazé is the co-founder and CEO of Heirloom, a company dedicated to providing no-code tools that help brands create safe environments for their customers online through blockchain technology. Dazé also co-founded PocketList and was an early team member at Faraday Future ($FFIE), Fullscreen (acquired by AT&T) and Bit Kitchen (acquired by Medium).

This article is for general information purposes and is not intended to be and should not be taken as legal or investment advice. The views, thoughts, and opinions expressed here are the author’s alone and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions of Cointelegraph.

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