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Businesses United States

Coinbase CEO Says SEC is On 'Lone Crusade' (cnbc.com) 54

The CEO of cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase, Brian Armstrong, doubled down on his criticisms of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission chief Gary Gensler Monday, but added the exchange would not leave the U.S. despite the regulatory uncertainty the company is facing in the country. From a report: The SEC earlier this year served Coinbase with a Wells Notice, a letter that the regulator sends to a company or firm at the conclusion of an SEC investigation that states the SEC is planning to bring an enforcement action against them. At the heart of the regulator's dispute with Coinbase, and a host of other crypto companies, is the allegation that it is selling unregistered securities to investors. Coinbase disputes this.

"The SEC is a bit of an outlier here," Armstrong told CNBC's Dan Murphy in an interview in Dubai Monday. "There's kind of a lone crusade, if you will, with Gary Gensler, the chair there, and he has taken a more anti-crypto view for some reason...I don't think he's necessarily trying to regulate the industry as much as maybe curtail it. But he's created some lawsuits, and I think it's quite unhelpful for the industry in the U.S. writ large, but it also is an opportunity for Coinbase to go get that clarity from the courts that we feel will really benefit the crypto industry and also the U.S. more broadly."

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Coinbase CEO Says SEC is On 'Lone Crusade'

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday May 08, 2023 @09:46AM (#63506401)
    It's the SEC's job to do this. poor billionaire can't have things the way he wants. Boo-hoo!
    • Pretty much this. It's their job to rein in scammers and ponzi schemes. That's their reason to exist.

    • by ElizabethGreene ( 1185405 ) on Monday May 08, 2023 @12:58PM (#63506963)

      The purpose of the SEC is to regulate the securities markets and protect investors. Coinbase asserts they aren't doing that job in crypto markets. Instead of creating regulations, guardrail rules for what is and is not acceptable, they sit in wait for a crypto company to get big enough to matter and then swat them down. This creates uncertainty around crypto that hurts broader crypto adoption.

      My understanding is that Coinbase's lawsuit is essentially "Do your damn job and publish rules for crypto exchanges in the US instead of regulating by lawsuit after the fact."

      Regulation is a problem. As a data point, the first BTC exchange I used was killed by the Georgia Banking commission. Damn shame; they were good folks. :/

      • by Anonymous Coward
        The rules are already there and everyone has tofollow them. blockchain or not.
        Crypto bros want to push the boundries as far as they can. And cry when they get caught going too far.
        Hire a lawyer who specialises in this and find out where the boundaries are for the new thing your trying to do. Don't want to pay real money (no cryptos) then stumble around in the dark. Just don't complain you didn't want to turn on the lights.
      • by Joce640k ( 829181 ) on Monday May 08, 2023 @11:28PM (#63508015) Homepage

        This creates uncertainty around crypto that hurts broader crypto adoption.

        And nothing of value is lost.

        (in fact, value may be created - it's all a Ponzi scheme)

      • As another data point, Today's /. headlines include
        US Crypto Exchange Bittrex Files For Bankruptcy [slashdot.org].

        Founded and operating since 2014, Bittrex got up to a billion in revenue (big enough to matter) then the SEC squished them. The SEC lawsuit [sec.gov]'s primary grievance is that the company advised crypto creators on what terms and phrases were likely to cause SEC scrutiny, e.g. describing it as an investment, growth projections, etc.

  • by Casandro ( 751346 ) on Monday May 08, 2023 @09:50AM (#63506407)

    Considering the cryptocurrency business has reached _none_ of the goals they stated in their early days, and doing that at the expense of everyone else, it only seems very mild to just want to regulate it. Any sane regulation would just outright ban it.

    So far the only remaining effect is to cause harm to the world, from ransomware to the waste of huge quantities of precious resources.

    • by TWX ( 665546 )

      When I look at crypto-currency, I see something like company scrip, but even worse in that it takes significant resources to produce it and there isn't even something like a company with its own tangible assets backing it.

      I see all of the downsides of a fiat currency, all of the downsides of a company scrip, but none of the advantages that even specie contains, where at least there's some material involved that has some amount of value in its own accord for bullion and other precious-metals.

      Don't get me wro

    • Regulation--even a draconian approach like you mention, just legitimizes the scams.

      The only thing that can stop the crypto virus is the crypto virus.

  • Waaaaah! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by iAmWaySmarterThanYou ( 10095012 ) on Monday May 08, 2023 @09:57AM (#63506431)

    We want unregulated access to fuck around with billions of people's dollars and those big meanies want us to follow some rules to protect our customers!!!

    Waaaaah! So mean! So unfair! Why can't we just pull every dirty trick that has been tried and regulated out of the stock market over the last hundred years? We are special! You Neanderthals don't understand! This is -digital-!!! It's on,one and in the cloud and wants to be free! We are the crypto bros; the laws of finance don't apply to us, everything is different now!

    Buy my NFT.

    • But that's just da man trying to keep the li'l guy from striking it big! They want to keep the money in the hands of their cronies, Bilderbergers, reptiloids and reverse vampires! They don't want you to invest and get rich unless they get to control it and .... Huh? What? No!

      WAA! Government sucks, they didn't keep the scammers from stealing my money!!!111!

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Monday May 08, 2023 @10:01AM (#63506449)
    they mean that Congress and the American people are on the SEC's side along with all of American law enforcement. Such a lonely crusade...
    • by leonbev ( 111395 )

      I can't imagine that many Coinbase investors are on Coinbase's side at this point anymore. I logged into my account just for haha's, and see that most of the shitcoins that they were giving away as promotional offers back in 2020 have lost over 90% of their initial value.

      • Those shitcoins earned through their learn-and-earn program are paid for by whatever centralized entity that create/issue them. They always shit the bed. If earning these are something you find fun, the best thing to do is to sell them immediately, or at the very least, trade them for Bitcoin

  • "More anti-crypto view for some reason" ...some reason? lol. Talk about head in the sand... I do get a kick out of all the slashdot crypto stories though, it really is fun to watch a sinking ship. Move along, nothing to see here!
  • Sounds like... (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Sebby ( 238625 )

    "There's kind of a lone crusade, if you will, with Gary Gensler, the chair there, and he has taken a more anti-crypto view for some reason...I don't think he's necessarily trying to regulate the industry as much as maybe curtail it"

    This rhetoric sounds a lot like a GOP/Trump play of playing the victim.

  • Gensler was grilled by Congress to explain the SEC's prima facie illegally discriminatory posture on Bitcoin and Ethereum. He would not and could not offer any valid legal or technical explanation for why they are officially classified as commodities by the SEC, but everything else (including proof of work or proof of less work coins) is considered a security.

    Note that the SEC hasn't actually recused itself from enforcing rules against the Ethereum ecosystem.

    Despite, you know, the fact that they legally the

    • by Bahbus ( 1180627 )

      Lmao, who in the flying fuck cares? Blockchains are a legitimate technology that have been taken over by so many shitty, scammy uses that it has become functionally useless for the mainstream. There are legitimate uses to a blockchain, but 99% of current ones are not legitimate. Your rant is meaningless and has absolutely no real point. Cry harder about the taste of your shit sandwich.

  • Let's face it, they really sell an insecurity and therefore should clearly be regulated the Insecurity Exchange Commision!

  • Mafia boss, on trial for racketeering and protection rackets, says unfair, protection money is just the cost of doing business, and I'm just a businessman....

  • The EU regulators are just less attention hungry, but not in any way less dangerous. At this time quasi-criminal enterprises like coinbase are just pretending they have a future.

    • It's really hard to tell with these guys whether they are sophisticated scam artists, or whether they're members of a cult. If they're the former, they've already cashed in their chips, moved the money off shore, and have a suitcase packed to fly out to Uzbekistan at the first sign of the Feds. The rest probably have drank the orange juice, and will try to argue that rectangles are round, even after they're put behind bars.

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        Well, there are both in the mix, like in any good cult or religion: Some leaders that know the whole thing is a scam and profit from it and a lot of useful idiots that believe the crap they are fed.

  • If you intend of staying in a country to offer crypto, could you not piss off the regulating authority??!
  • Well, of course. The crooks always outnumber the cops.

  • Criminal complains about being held to account for their crimes, news at 11!
  • ...to protect the market from fraudulent bullshit like crypto.
  • Multiple fraud cases with crypto, but SEC is on a "crusade"? hahaha, sounds like a crook talking.

  • We're all going to be millionaires if it weren't for the SEC.

A physicist is an atom's way of knowing about atoms. -- George Wald

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