Cryptocurrencies, or let’s say, Bitcoin (the first one ever), started as a quite small geeky niche in 2009. Very few people fully understood the concept, let alone guessed its potential back then. It wouldn’t be until May 22, 2010, that the first-ever real thing would be bought using BTC, and it was two pizzas. In a P2P transaction made between two American developers. So, we can say for sure that crypto wasn’t popular enough to be regulated by big-shot lawmakers.
That first purchase was like starting a snowball rolling downhill. People started to use Bitcoin as a global and permissionless payment method. Even for non-very-legal stuff, since it was a pseudonymous coin, difficult to track and block. That’s how the first BTC-focused marketplace was born: Silk Road, only available through the Tor browser, on the Darknet. That’s because it sold all kinds of illegal items —from drugs to weapons.
It wasn’t the best publicity for Bitcoin, sadly. This way, the first big ‘regulatory encounter’ the cryptocurrency had was against the US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in 2013 when they dismantled the site and arrested Ross Ulbricht, its founder. Bitcoin wasn’t designed to commit crimes, but it stayed in the general opinion (and in the lawmakers’ minds) that way for a while.
On the other hand, the terms “blockchain” and “distributed ledger technology” started to catch the attention of institutional players. Bitcoin’s underlying technology was becoming a promise to improve their own fields, so global regulators could be flexible about it.
Over the years, numerous companies and organizations started to test distributed ledgers in their own processes or directly created new services around this technology. To avoid stifling innovation, the general regulatory approach was “permissionless innovation:” developers in the crypto space should be generally free to experiment and explore new ways of using this technology without requiring explicit permission from regulatory authorities.
For instance, US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) Commissioner J. Christopher Giancarlo delivered a speech about it in 2016. According to
“«Do no harm» was unquestionably the right approach to development of the Internet. Similarly, “do no harm” is the right approach for DLT. Once again, the private sector must lead and regulators must avoid impeding innovation and investment and provide a predictable, consistent and straightforward legal environment (...) I believe that innovators and investors should not have to seek government’s permission, only its forbearance, to develop DLT so they can do the work necessary to address the increased operational complexity and capital consumption of modern financial market regulation.”
Meanwhile, in the US and other parts of the world,
One of the first authorities to apply the sandbox method for crypto companies was the Canadian Securities Administrators (
We can’t say sandboxes just died out because
In a market of this size, some incidents and crimes were bound to increase. According to the
Meanwhile, a huge regulatory step was taken inEl Salvador by June 2021: Bitcoin officially became a legal tender. A fact that increased not only that coin use but maybe the whole crypto market cap. And the concerns of global organizations, starting with the International Monetary Fund (IMF).
But 2022 would be the year of global lawmakers becoming really alert against the crypto world, due to several unfortunate and high-profile incidents.
It’s even difficult to believe that
The second ‘incident’ involved the venture fund Three Arrows Capital (3AC), which managed up to $10 billion in assets and investments, including significant holdings in Terra (LUNA) tokens. Following Terra's collapse, 3AC faced financial troubles, ultimately owing $3.5 billion to global creditors. Their bankruptcy filing in June 2022 had a ripple effect, impacting institutional creditors and causing losses for crypto protocols like Genesis Trading, Voyager, and Celsius, as well as affecting retail investors.
The last case centered on FTX, the third-largest global cryptocurrency exchange at the time. FTX faced a liquidity crisis in November 2022 due to severe funds mismanagement. Binance's decision to sell its FTT holdings (FTX native token) led to a surge in customer withdrawals that FTX couldn't meet. FTX filed for bankruptcy, and its founder, Sam Bankman-Fried, was arrested in December 2022.
The collapse of FTX raised concerns about investor protection and regulatory oversight, causing massive losses (over $3 billion) for institutional and retail investors. This, along with Terra and 3AC in the same year, would of course bring visible consequences for the whole industry in terms of regulations.
We must note that regulatory crypto-friendliness varies from region to region, but we’re likely in the “aggressive” mode in many countries these days. This approach isn’t exactly new, though. New York, in the United States, has been applying a tight
Right now, other regions are becoming stricter against crypto as well. In the US, for instance, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
As a consequence, Changpeng Zhao (ex-CEO of Binance) pleaded guilty to charges of violations of AML laws in the US. The exchange
In the European Union, the first cross-border comprehensive regulatory framework for cryptocurrencies is set to take
According to a study by
We can’t know for sure what’s next, but we can take some educated guesses. After the Terra and FTX incidents, stablecoins and crypto exchanges have become top priority for regulators. The European Union already put its limits with MiCA, and other regions will likely follow suit sooner rather than later. In the US, a
Meanwhile, according to the
Beyond this, some mostly unexplored territory by regulators in the crypto world includes Decentralized Finance (DeFi) tools like bridges, Non-Fungible Tokens (NFTs), smart contracts, ID solutions, and memecoins. Could this be touched by government laws in the future? At least we know about some cases already.
For example, the EU
The future seems regulated for a lot of aspects of the crypto industry, especially the ones somehow related to fiat currencies. However, we can still use tools without middlemen like
The absence of a single central authority or control point in most crypto ecosystems makes it challenging for regulators to shut down or control the entire network. The absence of any powerful centers (like block producers) in DAG-based crypto ecosystems like
Additionally, the privacy features of some cryptocurrencies, including Obyte, pose challenges for regulators in tracing and monitoring individual transactions. The immutable nature of distributed ledgers ensures that once a transaction is recorded, it cannot be altered or tampered with, further enhancing resistance to regulatory interference. If you want to protect your data and funds, and have to choose between a centralized service and a decentralized one, always go decentralized!
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