Digital regulatory professionals have predicted the wide use of stablecoins worldwide by 2030, despite the current competition between TradFi and DeFi.
Category: Regulation News
Kraken aims for restricted dealer registration in Canada to comply with new rules
In February, Canadian Securities Administrators announced enhanced investor protection requirements for crypto asset traders.
Sam Bankman-Fried pleads not guilty to bribery, charges from superseding indictment
The former FTX CEO’s legal team argued that, although SBF had entered a not-guilty plea, he did not acknowledge the new charges, which included bribing […]
Bitcoin profits are taxable in certain cases, says Denmark’s supreme court
The country’s supreme court released two decisions for cases in which different crypto users gained profits from sales of BTC “made for the purpose of […]
Hong Kong turns to Japan for advice after ‘mind-boggling’ Web3 influx
Hong Kong is looking to Japan for guidance to become a friendly environment for cryptocurrency following an overwhelming response to Web3 investment.
Thai SEC wants to lift restrictions on initial coin offerings
The latest proposal by the SEC of Thailand follows a series of regulatory changes targeting the digital asset market in the country.
From Bat-Signal to Bitcoin: Projecting ‘Orange Pill’ on banks as EU drives crypto regulation
The Bitcoin logo lights up on the European Central Bank building in Frankfurt as Bitcoiners urge bankers to ‘study Bitcoin.’
Government requests for user data from Big Tech increased by 25%: Report
Requests for user data from Big Tech companies such as Apple, Google and Microsoft continue to rise year after year from governments around the world.
DeFi KYC: Not an issue as ‘99% have nothing to hide,’ industry execs say
Traditional finance observes “money laundering happening every day” despite rigorous KYC measures, according to DeFi industry execs.
Fair crypto laws ‘possible’ in the US but needs ‘a lot of work’ — Crypto Council advisor
Crypto Council for Innovation advisor Sean Lee said more education is needed for policymakers and financial regulators.