You could be making a point when saying regulations do not stop scams,our conventional system is regulated,but yet scams are still present,but at what scale?
Centralization may not stop scams totally but definitely it'll reduce the level of scams, when there abounds a body to crosscheck projects and managers of projects,when this projects go through proper scrutiny before its brought to the open community,definitely that will be controlling and reducing scam to its bearest minimum...
But regulations to me will defeat what the system was built upon and that's decentralization,which means a lack of control by any system or regulatory body whatsoever
regulations dont stop scams.
regulations just add a hefty pricetag for businesses to startup. and un-organised/poor scammers wont pay.
so its not about scammers reduce due to a law. they reduce because of the pricetag to be certified
meaning RICH scammers will still scam. and poor scammers dont because the point of poor scamming is to get funds not give funds
however if there was consumer protections which had a price tag to accredit a business.
the same positive result occurs where poor scammers dont accredit themselves. but the other positive is that businesses then get policed so that the rich scammers also risk penalties for screwing with customers
in short consumer protection and regulation both pricetag poor scammers out of attempting to start up, both accredit honest businesses
where as regulation would have let them scam and give the scammer privileges to police its customers
but consumer protection lets customers have rights to police the business
we all know the government want controls. but instead of making the SEC a pay for-certification agency letting businesses set up policies of how a business will stop customers doing stuff. what should happen is things like better business bureau and courts let customers have more power over the businesses they choose to interact with
basically spin the power upside down more in favour of the user not the business