In 2018, Gansler stated that Ethereum and Ripple could fall within the scope of defining unregistered securities.
OK, that seems to be an ominous statement--what would the implications be if ETH, XRP, and other cryptocurrencies be if they were legally classified as "cryptosecurities"? Would that mean their creators be legally liable for the consequences of distributing an unlicensed security? I'm not sure where this guy is going with that.
Am I misinformed here? Didn't the last SEC chairman publicly announce that ETH once fell into the category of securities but that is not the case anymore? What kind of dick move would it be to revoke such a categorization just because the chairman changes?
One thing I do agree with is that crypto has turned out to be far closer to a security (though I'm not 100% sure what the true definition is of that word) than a currency. Bitcoin as an example, has been used far more as an investment than as a form of money--though obviously it could function as either.
You could argue that that is the same for currency traders who trade foreign currencies solely for the purpose of using them as an investment vehicle with the prospects for a future profit. I do agree with you and relatively early came myself to the conclusion that most of cryptocurrencies could be labeled securities. But with all due respect for the existing law, if the world of finance changes so drastically it is more than obvious that the law has to also change such that it does at least in part sufficiently accommodate this digital, financial and above all social revolution.
These government functionaries drive me nuts with their regulation (or their talk of regulation as is the case here). I'm afraid this crap is only going to get worse under the Biden administration, and it's too bad Trump was the republican party's choice for president. If we'd had a much less volatile president in the Republican party, he might have gotten re-elected and we probably wouldn't have to worry about this stuff.
May have been the case, but Trump also was against Bitcoin. He was talking about money laundering as well while evading taxes all over the world. We can only hope that a younger generation of presidents with younger kids growing up with this stuff get elected in as many countries as possible all over the world. It's mostly stone age presidents trying to avoid the emergence of a level playing field where the less wealthy or even the poor now also have a chance to participate and, not that I advocate that, even hide and store money in places the corrupt politicians have no access to.