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Crypto startup Bastion secures money transmitter licenses in US

Launched in September by two former Andreessen Horowitz executives, Bastion has acquired its first two money transmitter licenses in New Hampshire and Arkansas.

Bastion, a new cryptocurrency startup created by former Andreessen Horowitz (a16z) executives, has secured two money transmitter licenses (MTL) in the United States.

Bastion has acquired MTLs in New Hampshire and Arkansas, the first two licenses obtained by the firm, Bastion announced on Oct. 31.

The new licenses, granted by the New Hampshire Banking Department and Arkansas Securities Department, will enable Bastion to offer services for fungible digital assets in each state. It has additional applications pending for MTLs in other U.S. states, the firm said.

The license acquisitions enable Bastion to participate in activities related to the selling or issuance of payment instruments, stored value, prepaid access, as well as the receipt of money and digital currency to facilitate transactions with others in the states. The licenses can be located on the official website of the Nationwide Multistate Licensing System (NMLS).

Bastion’s money transmitter license. Source: NMLS

The licenses come just one month after Bastion’s launch in mid-September 2023. The regulatory approvals mark Bastion’s commitment to providing U.S. businesses with the ability to engage their customers in compliant exposure to digital assets like Bitcoin (BTC).

Related: Kraken will share data of 42,000 users with IRS

Bastion was founded by two former a16z crypto division executives, Nassim Eddequiouaq and Riyaz Faizullabhoy, with a mission to integrate Web3 infrastructure into their existing enterprise technologies. Bastion’s launch was announced in conjunction with a $25 million seed funding round, which was led by a16z crypto.

“The acquisition of MTLs in New Hampshire and Arkansas is a consequential step in realizing our long-term vision,” Bastion co-founder Eddequiouaq said. He added that the firm views the milestone as a “testament to the strength and speed” of Bastion and looks forward to continuing the momentum to expand its areas of operation.

In receiving the MTLs, Bastion joins the growing list of crypto-related firms that obtained the license, including Alchemy Pay, Coinbase, Jack Dorsey’s Block, MoonPay, bitFlyer exchange and others. In July 2023, Elon Musk’s X (formerly Twitter) payment subsidiary reportedly received its first MTLs in Michigan, New Hampshire and Missouri.

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Crypto asset manager Valkyrie amends spot Bitcoin ETF filing

With the latest spot BTC ETF amendments by Valkyrie and VanEck joining at least six others to make similar changes, five other spot Bitcoin ETF filings are yet to be amended.

Digital asset manager Valkyrie Investments is the latest firm to amend its spot Bitcoin (BTC) exchange-traded fund (ETF) filing with United States securities regulators.

Valkyrie filed an updated spot Bitcoin ETF with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on Oct. 30, according to the SEC database.

The updated form S-1 registration statement for the Valkyrie Bitcoin Fund aims to offer investors an opportunity to invest in common shares backed by Bitcoin. The shares represent units of fractional undivided beneficial interest and ownership of the trust and are expected to be traded under the ticker symbol “BRRR” on the Nasdaq Stock Market.

“The information in this prospectus is not complete and may be changed,” Valkyrie stated in the filing, adding that the firm is not allowed to sell BRRR securities until the registration statement is effective.

The amended filing comes about a month after the SEC delayed its decision on the Valkyrie Bitcoin Fund in late September.

Valkyrie’s updated spot Bitcoin ETF joins at least six other recently amended spot BTC ETF filings made by Bitwise, BlackRock, Fidelity, Grayscale, VanEck and ARK Invest.

Related: Are Bitcoin ETFs headed for one epic Gensler ‘rugpull?’ Analysts weigh in

According to online crypto ETF analysts, the ongoing Bitcoin ETF amendments could be translated as a “good sign” of progress and impending approvals. Valkyrie’s latest spot Bitcoin ETF update is yet another evidence of movement happening behind the scenes, Bloomberg ETF analyst James Seyffart believes.

Following the recent amendments, at least five of the rest of the known spot Bitcoin ETF filers have not updated their filings, including firms like WisdomTree, Invesco and Galaxy, Global X, Hashdex and Franklin Templeton.

The SEC currently has eight to 10 filings of possible spot Bitcoin ETFs waiting for the regulator’s consideration, SEC chair Gary Gensler reportedly said in late October.

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TikTok, Snapchat, OnlyFans and others to combat AI-generated child abuse content

Major social platforms, AI companies, governments and NGOs issued a joint statement pledging to combat AI-generated abusive content, such as explicit images of children.

A coalition of major social media platforms, artificial intelligence (AI) developers, governments and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) have issued a joint statement pledging to combat abusive content generated by AI.

On Oct. 30, the United Kingdom issued the policy statement, which includes 27 signatories, including the governments of the United States, Australia, Korea, Germany and Italy, along with social media platforms Snapchat, TikTok and OnlyFans.

It was also undersigned by the AI platforms Stability AI and Ontocord.AI and a number of NGOs working toward internet safety and children’s rights, among others.

The statement says that while AI offers “enormous opportunities” in tackling threats of online child sexual abuse, it can also be utilized by predators to generate such types of material.

It revealed data from the Internet Watch Foundation that, within a month of 11,108 AI-generated images shared in a dark web forum, 2,978 depicted content related to child sexual abuse.

Related: US President Joe Biden urges tech firms to address risks of AI

The U.K. government said the statement stands as a pledge to “seek to understand and, as appropriate, act on the risks arising from AI to tackling child sexual abuse through existing fora.”

“All actors have a role to play in ensuring the safety of children from the risks of frontier AI.”

It encouraged transparency on plans for measuring, monitoring and managing ways AI can be exploited by child sexual offenders and on a country level to build policies regarding the topic.

Additionally, it aims to maintain a dialogue around combating child sexual abuse in the AI age. This statement was released in the run-up to the U.K. hosting its global summit on AI safety this week.

Concerns over child safety in relation to AI have been a major topic of discussion in the face of the rapid emergence and widespread use of the technology.

On Oct. 26, 34 states in the U.S. filed a lawsuit against Meta, the Facebook and Instagram parent company, over child safety concerns.

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Do Kwon and Terraform Labs ask judge to toss SEC’s lawsuit

Do Kwon, the co-founder now-collapsed Terraform ecosystem maintains he and his firm did not skirt U.S. securities laws.

Terraform Labs co-founder Do Kwon has requested a United States district judge to reject the securities and fraud suit from the federal securities regulator, claiming it has failed to prove they did anything wrong.

In an Oct. 27 filing to a New York District Court, lawyers for Kwon and Terraform argued its cryptocurrencies Terra Luna Classic (LUNC), TerraClassicUSD (USTC), Mirror Protocol (MIR) and its Mirrored Assets (mAssets) that reflect stocks on-chain are not securities as the Securities and Exchange Commission alleged.

“After two years of investigation, the completion of a discovery period that resulted in the taking of more than 20 depositions, and the exchange of over two million pages of documents and data, the SEC is evidentiarily no closer to proving that the Defendants did anything wrong,” the lawyers wrote.

They added the “evidence does not exist to support many of the SEC’s claims” and asserted the regulator “knew some of its allegations were false” — in particular, an allegation that Kwon and Terraform secretly moved millions into Swiss bank accounts for their own gain.

Kwon’s lawyers claimed the SEC is trying to draw parallels between Terraform and FTX. Source: CourtListener

In its suit against Kwon and Terraform filed in February, the SEC claimed the pair sent 10,000 Bitcoin (BTC) to a Swiss financial institution and withdrew $100 million. It also claimed they committed fraud by “repeating false and misleading statements.”

“The SEC knew this allegation was false when it filed this case,” Kwon’s lawyers wrote. ”This is made even worse by the undisputed fact that TFL had no customers, and thus no customer funds.”

The $40 billion Terra ecosystem collapsed in May 2022 after its USTC algorithmic stablecoin lost its U.S. dollar peg.

Related: Terraform co-founder Shin blames protocol for collapse during trial in S. Korea

Kwon and Terraform also moved to exclude the opinion of the SEC’s experts including a report from Rutgers University economics professor Bruce Mizrach which they called “junk science.”

Judge Jed Rakoff, who oversees the case, denied Terraform’s earlier attempt to toss the lawsuit.

Kwon is currently detained in Montenegro and has previously asked the court to reject the SEC’s motion to extradite and interview him in the U.S.

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Biden administration releases executive order for new AI safety standards

The U.S. government’s executive order establishes six new standards for AI safety and security and its intentions for ethical AI usage within the government.

The administration of United States President Joe Biden released an executive order on Oct. 30 establishing new standards for artificial intelligence (AI) safety and security. 

Biden’s address said it is building off previous actions taken, including AI safety commitments from 15 leading companies in the industry. The new standards have six primary touch points for the new AI standards, along with plans for the ethical use of AI in the government, privacy practices for citizens, and steps for protecting consumer privacy.

The first standard requires developers of the most powerful AI system to share safety test results and “critical information” with the government. Secondly, the National Institute of Standards and Technology will develop standardized tools and tests for ensuring AI’s safety, security and trustworthiness.

The administration also aims to protect against the risk of AI usage to engineer “dangerous biological materials” through new biological synthesis screening standards.

Another standard includes working toward protection from AI-enabled fraud and deception. It says standards and best practices for detecting AI-generated content and authenticating official content will be established.

It also plans to build on the administration’s ongoing AI Cyber Challenge that was announced in August, by advancing a cybersecurity program to develop AI tools to find and fix vulnerabilities in critical software. Finally, it ordered the development of a national security memorandum, which will further direct actions on AI security.

The order also touched on privacy risks of AI saying that:

“Without safeguards, AI can put Americans’ privacy further at risk. AI not only makes it easier to extract, identify, and exploit personal data, but it also heightens incentives to do so because companies use data to train AI systems.”

To this, the president officially called on Congress to pass bipartisan data privacy legislation to prioritize federal support for the development and research of privacy techniques and technologies. 

Related: Adobe, IBM, Nvidia join US President Biden’s efforts to prevent AI misuse

Officials in the U.S. also plan to focus efforts on advancements in equity and civil rights in regards to AI, employ the responsible use of AI to bring benefits to consumers and monitor the technology’s impact on the job market, among other social-related topics. 

Lastly, the order laid out the administration's plans for involvement with AI regulations worldwide. The U.S. was one of the seven G7 countries that recently agreed on a voluntary AI code of conduct for AI developers.

Within the government itself, it says it plans to release clear standards to “protect rights and safety, improve AI procurement, and strengthen AI deployment” and provide AI training for all employees in relevant fields.

In July, U.S. Senators held a classified meeting at the White House to discuss regulations for the technology and the Senate has held a series of “AI Insight Forums” to hear from top AI experts in the industry.

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G7 countries to launch AI code of conduct: Report

The Group of Seven (G7) countries will agree on a voluntary AI code of conduct for companies developing AI to reference for mitigating risks and benefits of the technology.

The Group of Seven (G7) industrial countries are scheduled to agree upon an artificial intelligence (AI) code of conduct for developers on Oct. 30, according to a report by Reuters. 

According to the report, the code has 11 points that aim to promote “safe, secure, and trustworthy AI worldwide” and help “seize” the benefits of AI while still addressing and troubleshooting the risks it poses.

The plan was drafted by G7 leaders in September. It says it offers voluntary guidance of actions for “organizations developing the most advanced AI systems, including the most advanced foundation models and generative AI systems.”

Additionally, it suggests that companies should publicize reports on the capabilities, limitations, use and misuse of the systems being built. Robust security controls for said systems are also recommended.

Countries involved in the G7 include Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, the United States and the European Union.

Cointelegraph has reached out to the G7 for confirmation of the development and additional information.

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This year’s G7 took place in Hiroshima, Japan, with a meeting held between all participating Digital and Tech Ministers on April 29 and 30.

Topics covered in the meeting included emerging technologies, digital infrastructure and AI, with an agenda item specifically dedicated to responsible AI and global AI governance.

The G7’s AI code of conduct comes as governments worldwide are trying to navigate the emergence of AI with its useful capabilities and concerns. The EU was among the first to establish guidelines with its landmark EU AI Act, which had its first draft passed in June.

On Oct. 26, the United Nations established a 39-member advisory committee to tackle issues related to the global regulation of AI.

The Chinese government also launched its own AI regulation, which began to take effect back in August.

From within the industry, the developer of the popular AI chatbot ChatGPT, OpenAI, announced that it plans to create a “preparedness” team that will assess a range of AI-related risks.

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VanEck amends application for spot Bitcoin ETF

VanEck joins the group of asset managers updating applications for a spot Bitcoin ETF in the United States.

Asset manager VanEck filed an amended application for a spot Bitcoin (BTC) exchange-traded fund (ETF) on Oct. 27 with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), according to the regulator’s database.

The amended filing highlights that a seed capital investor purchased in October the Seed Creation Baskets — a block of 50,000 shares of the proposed ETF — with Bitcoin prices determined by MarketVector Bitcoin Benchmark Rate, an index used as a reference price of the cryptocurrency.

According to finance lawyer Scott Johnsson, the filing suggests the fund seeding will be carried out with Bitcoin, different from other spot Bitcoin ETF proposals with seeding in cash.

A spot Bitcoin ETF would directly invest in Bitcoin, as opposed to existing ETFs that invest in Bitcoin futures. The spot version of the product is expected to draw substantial investments from investors seeking Bitcoin exposure via traditional asset managers.

With this new filing, VanEck joins a growing list of asset managers updating their applications for a spot Bitcoin ETF. In September, Bitwise Asset Management also filed an amended application responding to the SEC’s objections to the product.

Early this month, ARK Invest and 21Shares amended their joint application as well, providing additional information about their proposed spot Bitcoin ETF, including practices for asset custody and valuation.

The wave of amended filings may indicate that negotiations between asset managers and regulators are progressing. Commenting on filings awaiting regulatory approval, ETF analyst Eric Balchunas recently noted the changes in ETF proposals may reflect SEC requests for issuers to address concerns.

“It means ARK got the SEC’s comments and has dealt with them all, and now put [the] ball back in [the] SEC’s court,” Balchunas explained on X (formerly Twitter). “[In my opinion] good sign, solid progress.”

The U. S. SEC has delayed its decision on several proposals for spot Bitcoin ETFs in the country, including from BlackRock, Invesco, Bitwise, VanEck and Valkyrie. Market participants and analysts predict that a decision should be made within weeks.

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Ripple CEO criticizes former SEC Chair Jay Clayton’s comments

Clayton emphasized that regulatory agencies should introduce regulations and legal cases they believe will successfully withstand judicial scrutiny.

Ripple CEO Brad Garlinghouse strongly criticized former United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Chair Jay Clayton’s remarks regarding the agency’s regulatory approach. Since the first quarter of 2023, the SEC has initiated various regulatory actions against crypto exchanges and companies.

During an interview with CNBC on June 29, 2023, Clayton expressed his view that the SEC should pursue legal action against specific companies only when they have strong legal grounds. He emphasized that regulatory agencies should introduce regulations and legal cases they believe will successfully withstand judicial scrutiny.

In light of the SEC voting to dismiss the allegations without prejudice, the Ripple CEO reminded that the former SEC chair had filed a lawsuit that had little chance of success in court. In the lawsuit against Ripple, Garlinghouse and Ripple co-founder Christian Larsen in December 2020, the SEC accused the company and the two executives of “unregistered, ongoing digital asset securities offering,” alleging that they had raised more than $1.3 billion from sales of the XRP (XRP) token.

Garlinghouse said:

“As a reminder, Jay Clayton brought the case against Ripple, me and Chris Larsen. And left the building the next day.”

Clayton’s statements made in June 2023 have gained attention in light of the recent lawsuit developments involving Garlinghouse and Ripple founder Chris Larsen. As previously reported, the charges against these executives were dropped by the US SEC. Notably, the charges were brought on shortly before Clayton’s tenure as SEC Chair ended, which was well before the expected expiration date in June 2021.

Related: Ripple exec and XRP community back SEC commissioner’s LBRY lawsuit dissent

The recent exoneration of the two executives follows a decision by Judge Analisa Torres in July 2023, where it was determined that selling XRP on secondary markets to individual buyers does not qualify as an investment contract.

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Sam Bankman-Fried’s perspective on FTX fall

Sam Bankman-Fried testified in court this week, denying any wrongdoing between FTX and Alameda Research despite admitting “big mistakes."

Sam “SBF” Bankman-Fried took the stand this week to testify in his ongoing criminal trial in the Southern District of New York, denying any wrongdoing between FTX and Alameda Research, while acknowledging making "big mistakes" during the companies’ fast-paced growth. 

His official testimony started on Oct. 27, after a hearing on the previous day without the jurors present. During the hearing, Bankman-Fried struggled to answer questions raised by government attorneys, whereas he appeared much better prepared the following day to face the jury.

A few highlights of Bankman-Fried’s testimony this week include denying directing his inner circle to make millionaire political donations in 2021, as well as claims that FTX's Term of Uses covered transactions between Alameda and the crypto exchange. Moreover, the former CEO stated that he had requested additional hedging strategies for Alameda throughout 2021 and 2022, but they were never implemented.

The defense is expected to conclude Bankman-Fried’s examination on Oct. 30, followed by the prosecution’s cross-examinations and closing arguments from both sides. Prosecutors also hinted about a possible rebuttal witness next week — someone who is called to prove that the testimony of another witness is false or inaccurate.

Bankman-Fried could be jailed for 115 years if found guilty of all fraud and conspiracy counts. Cointelegraph’s on-the-ground coverage of his testimony is summarized below.

SBF refutes claims over political donations

Bankman-Fried denied in court having directing Ryan Salame, former co-CEO of FTX Digital Markets, and Nishad Singh, former director of engineering, to funnel millions of dollars in contributions to political campaigns.

According to data available on OpenSecret, Singh gave $8 million to federal campaigns in the 2022 election cycle. Salame also donated $10 million to politicians via loans from Alameda Research.

Even though Bankman-Fried denied instructing both to make political contributions, he recognized that lobbying in Washington, D.C. played a key role in his efforts to push a regulatory framework for crypto firms in the United States during 2021.

"I came to believe that I could impact the world."

According to prosecutors, Bankman-Fried used funds from customers' deposits on FTX to make more than $100 million in political campaign contributions ahead of the 2022 midterm elections.

Bankman-Fried denied any wrongdoing during his testimony, asserting that FTX had more than $1 billion in revenue in 2021 and that political donations were made from the exchange’s own funds.

The New York Times test

Bankman-Fried had a guideline for employees' communication at FTX and Alameda Research: The New York Times test. 

Based on the informal test, employees should not write anything they wouldn't be comfortable seeing on the front page of the newspaper. According to Bankman-Fried, even harmless things could "look pretty bad out of context," so employees should be sure to always provide sufficient context in written messages.

Bankman-Fried described the test as part of his explanation of why more than 200 channels on Signal had an autodelete policy that permanently deleted messages after a week.

Prosecutors used evidence of the autodelete feature in the previous days to suggest that any wrongdoing between the companies was being covered up. According to Bankman-Fried, official communications and regulatory paperwork were handled through other channels, such as Slack or email, but Signal was the choice for daily communication within the companies.

Alameda’s unique role on FTX 

Bankman-Fried provided details about Alameda's billionaire line of credit with FTX. According to his testimony, Alameda served as FTX's payment provider for wire transactions while the exchange was unable to have its own account. 

Besides being a payment processor, Alameda was also the primary liquidity provider, market maker and a client of FTX.

As liquidity provider and market maker, Alameda would have to step in and cover customer losses if FTX’s risk engine failed. During his testimony, Bankman-Fried provided an example of a failure of the risk engine that resulted in Alameda covering millions of dollars in losses in 2021.

The nature of Alameda's role in the exchange's operations prompted custom features in FTX's code, such as the ability to go negative via a line of credit without activating the risk engine. According to Bankman-Fried, the exemption was necessary to prevent Alameda's potential liquidation, which would negatively impact the crypto markets.

As a client of FTX, Alameda was also able to borrow funds by depositing collateral in the exchange. The terms of use of FTX allow borrowers to use funds for any purpose, which means Alameda could trade with the borrowed funds.

Alameda's line of credit with FTX grew along with the crypto industry during the bull market.

Scenes from outside Bankman-Fried’s trial location in New York. Source: Ana Paula Pereira/Cointelegraph

Alameda fails to hedge

Bankman-Fried discussed hedging strategies with Caroline Ellison, former CEO of Alameda Research, in 2021 and 2022 while seeking to shield the trading platform from a possible market downturn.

According to his testimony, Bankman-Fried asked Ellison to hedge $2 billion in Bitcoin (BTC) against a possible price decline in 2021. The strategy was never implemented, he told jurors.

Notes of Ellison shared as evidence by prosecutors reveal that Bankman-Fried was "freaking out" about hedging in early 2022. The defense used the evidence to illustrate that hedging was one of Bankman-Fried's highest concerns and discussed with Ellison frequently.

Without appropriate hedging in place, Alameda was significantly harmed by the Terra ecosystem collapse and decline in crypto prices. In September 2022, Bankman-Fried learned the liability between the companies had grown from $2 billion a year before to over $8 billion.

"I was very surprised,” he claimed in court, stating that he believed Alameda’s assets outweighed its liabilities by nearly $10 billion.

Clawback provision in Terms of Use

According to Bankman-Fried, FTX's terms of use include a clawback provision that would socialize losses among customers using margin trade and futures contracts in the event that the exchange's risk engine fails.

The document presented in court states that:

"[...] your account balance may be subject to clawback due to losses suffered by other users.”

If FTX could not cover losses related to spot margins and futures, damages would be shared among all customers. Defense lawyers used the provision to argue that customers trading on FTX were aware of the risks involved.

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Hester Peirce speaks out against LBRY enforcement action: ‘The market could have decided’

The SEC commissioner said the regulator’s actions “forced a group of entrepreneurs to abandon what they built,” with LBRY announcing in October it planned to wind down operations.

Hester Peirce of the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has issued a dissenting opinion on the regulator’s lawsuit against blockchain firm LBRY.

In an Oct. 27 statement, Peirce described feeling “unsettled” following the SEC’s enforcement action against LBRY in March 2021. In November 2022, a judge ruled in favor of the SEC, stating that the firm’s LBC token was a security. Though LBRY appealed the decision, the company announced in October that it planned to wind down, citing millions of dollars in debt due to legal costs.

“This case illustrates the arbitrariness and real-life consequences of the Commission’s misguided enforcement-driven approach to crypto,” said Peirce.

According to Peirce, the SEC’s case against LBRY was “puzzling” given there was no evidence of fraud and the firm took a conservative approach to digital assets compared to other crypto projects. The SEC commissioner suggested that there had been no clear path for a project like LBRY to come in and register with the regulator, and “it would not be a particularly useful effort” if it had managed to do so.

“[T]he Commission took an extremely hardline approach in this case,” said Peirce. “For example, after winning on summary judgment, the Commission sought monetary remedies of $44 million and asserted that LBRY’s offer to burn all tokens in its possession was not sufficient assurance that LBRY would not violate the registration provisions in the future. The Commission’s requested remedies were entirely out of proportion to any harm.”

She added:

“The time and resources we expended on this case could have been devoted to building a workable regulatory framework that companies like LBRY could have followed. Then the market could have decided LBRY’s fate.”

“The Commission’s action forced a group of entrepreneurs to abandon what they built,” said Peirce. “Our disproportionate reaction in this case will dissuade people from experimenting with blockchain technology.”

Related: SEC revises $22M penalty against LBRY, seeks $111K instead

Peirce has often been a dissenting voice at the SEC in crypto-related enforcement cases. In September, she told Cointelegraph that crypto firms shouldn’t give up on trying to launch in the United States, but added she believed the commission was “far behind” in finding a solution for a regulatory framework.

Gary Gensler, who chairs the SEC, has often called on crypto firms to “come in and talk” to the regulator to avoid potential enforcement actions. To date, the regulator has filed lawsuits against crypto exchanges Binance and Coinbase, and many other firms in the space.

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