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Topic: SEC ICO Enforcement (Read 983 times)

legendary
Activity: 1848
Merit: 1000
July 26, 2017, 12:41:43 PM
#22
I expect to see a lot of new launches of traditional PoW and PoS coins come back into favor.

I would really like to see mined coins and PoS coins take the show back from ICOs for awhile.
There is no return to be had anymore on any of these ICOs and the scam level of ICOs has reached a fever pitch right now.

Will be interesting to see how exchanges react to SEC news.

--Will ICO coins be delisted? Will they be restricted to non-US traders only?
--Or will exchanges get proper approval from SEC? Do they even need approval?
--Will they fight it? Will they work out a deal? Or will they disregard it until action comes?


I agree, I would like to see a good old fashioned coin launch allowing it to be mined with no premine and no ICO.  Not every launch has to have an ICO, the ICO trendy phase will come to an end sooner or later.
legendary
Activity: 1246
Merit: 1000
July 26, 2017, 12:28:05 PM
#21
Get VPN and then who cares, do whatever you want

You maybe ready to invest, but those running the ICO may be very wary. They wouldn't want to be hauled over the coals by the SEC.
Investors may be small fry, but the SEC will definitely go after the organizers.
sr. member
Activity: 322
Merit: 250
July 26, 2017, 12:21:59 PM
#20
Get VPN and then who cares, do whatever you want

If this is what you are suggesting, then be sure to do it under the radar and not to move money that will attract attention because when it gets to that, hiding behind VPNs might not be enough but the issue here is not to go after the small contirbutos rather the cashiers of the ICOs who see that as a means to get rich quick in which I am in support if there is a body ready to make them responsible as the only ones who are to get over the hurdle, we are sure it will worth it.
L
full member
Activity: 182
Merit: 100
July 26, 2017, 04:27:59 AM
#19
Not all ICOs fall under the definition of securities, ICOs like the DAO are securities.

USA citizens need to inform themselves about securities law, everyone else should be very careful with USA based exchanges, government can decide to apprehend exchange funds at any time.
legendary
Activity: 1386
Merit: 1023
July 26, 2017, 04:08:20 AM
#18
I expect to see a lot of new launches of traditional PoW and PoS coins come back into favor.

I would really like to see mined coins and PoS coins take the show back from ICOs for awhile.
There is no return to be had anymore on any of these ICOs and the scam level of ICOs has reached a fever pitch right now.

Will be interesting to see how exchanges react to SEC news.

--Will ICO coins be delisted? Will they be restricted to non-US traders only?
--Or will exchanges get proper approval from SEC? Do they even need approval?
--Will they fight it? Will they work out a deal? Or will they disregard it until action comes?

member
Activity: 84
Merit: 10
Refereum.com
July 26, 2017, 02:45:04 AM
#17
There's a lot of misinformed information being spread in this thread. Research the difference between security investment tokens and utility product tokens.
member
Activity: 112
Merit: 10
July 26, 2017, 02:35:01 AM
#16
Looking at the SEC ruling of yesterday I would stay away from ICOS and go to coins that were distributed in a non ico way. So basically only community coins without a company attached to it. That also excludes ETH

Hmm, it seems anything up to this point would at least be 'grandfathered in'. The don't typically release statements and then retroactively start charging people.

Not people but exchanges and companies. So either exchanges register as a normal bank or delist all potential securities. Like almost all altcoins and icocrap. Applying for a license will be an enormous effort transforming an exchange into a bank with all rules that apply to that. Only from and audit perspective and technical perspectjjve that is a huge effort.

So delist all potential coins that can be seen as a security is the easy route. Bye bye eth, eos, Tezos, Bankor and a whole list of other coins. Also all Insta or premined or hybrid forms (dash) can be seen as an ICO.
Only coins that pass the test are  coins not related to companies or organizations
sr. member
Activity: 498
Merit: 252
Life failures Stealthcoin, Ark coin and Safemoon
July 26, 2017, 01:32:35 AM
#15
no one really care SEC enforce or not
sr. member
Activity: 404
Merit: 253
July 26, 2017, 01:20:17 AM
#14
Looking at the SEC ruling of yesterday I would stay away from ICOS and go to coins that were distributed in a non ico way. So basically only community coins without a company attached to it. That also excludes ETH

Hmm, it seems anything up to this point would at least be 'grandfathered in'. The don't typically release statements and then retroactively start charging people.
member
Activity: 112
Merit: 10
July 26, 2017, 01:15:00 AM
#13
Looking at the SEC ruling of yesterday I would stay away from ICOS and go to coins that were distributed in a non ico way. So basically only community coins without a company attached to it. That also excludes ETH
sr. member
Activity: 432
Merit: 250
Bitrated user: Foex.
July 26, 2017, 12:19:02 AM
#12
As far as I know, none of the ICO are based in US nor they offer ICO to the US residents. Bad for those US residents who bought in the ICO using VPN
member
Activity: 78
Merit: 10
July 25, 2017, 11:50:02 PM
#11
Get VPN and then who cares, do whatever you want

This is bad advice. The SEC is already giving fair warning to all the ICO founders. Be compliant or they will be accountable to go to prison. This does not signify well if you are an ICO investor because the price might go down. Cryptocoin exchanges will also be accountable.
Shoot, they threw that Silk Road dude in prison for life.  Life.  I get that it was for drugs and possible murder for hire, but the government isn't messing around with crypto.  The early stage is where they make examples of people.  I wouldn't touch these scammy ass ICOs anyway.  Too much BS, too much uncertainty.

Wasn't in actually IN the US?
And i read he was charged with money laundering, conspiracy to traffic narcotics and computer hacking.
Nothing about SEC violations.
legendary
Activity: 3458
Merit: 6948
Top Crypto Casino
July 25, 2017, 11:34:54 PM
#10
Get VPN and then who cares, do whatever you want

This is bad advice. The SEC is already giving fair warning to all the ICO founders. Be compliant or they will be accountable to go to prison. This does not signify well if you are an ICO investor because the price might go down. Cryptocoin exchanges will also be accountable.
Shoot, they threw that Silk Road dude in prison for life.  Life.  I get that it was for drugs and possible murder for hire, but the government isn't messing around with crypto.  The early stage is where they make examples of people.  I wouldn't touch these scammy ass ICOs anyway.  Too much BS, too much uncertainty.
legendary
Activity: 1588
Merit: 1000
July 25, 2017, 11:34:15 PM
#9
Does this mean that the entity selling the new coin is subject to enforcement or is it both the seller and investors.

If it is both, would the enforcement be to seize funds/coins from investors? Also, if someone invested in coins during an ICO but waited a week or two until the ICO ended, would the selling of ICO-funded coins still count as securities? I would assume that it would not because that would mean BitCoin would also be subject to these regulations, right?

The SEC exists to protect investors...
They do not have the resources to target small investors.

A good idea is to get legal advice from internet chat boards... or random professor media whores  Cheesy
member
Activity: 78
Merit: 10
July 25, 2017, 11:22:37 PM
#8
I found a good post explaining the SEC regulations in general, or the possible opt outs here:
http://decentralizedlegal.com/reg-s/

BUt, what is so different about the US in this respect compared to the EU?
Or even, individual EU member states, don't they all have their own regulatory equivalent to the US's  SEC?
How do they regard ICO's?
member
Activity: 118
Merit: 10
July 25, 2017, 10:52:34 PM
#7
I'm thinking this applies to ethereum tokens also?
legendary
Activity: 3010
Merit: 1460
July 25, 2017, 10:09:00 PM
#6
Get VPN and then who cares, do whatever you want

This is bad advice. The SEC is already giving fair warning to all the ICO founders. Be compliant or they will be accountable to go to prison. This does not signify well if you are an ICO investor because the price might go down. Cryptocoin exchanges will also be accountable.
newbie
Activity: 38
Merit: 0
July 25, 2017, 09:22:50 PM
#5
The memo, at this point, simply adds clarity to what they've evaluated ICOs to be.  It warns of potential for fraud and limited options for restitution if you are defrauded.

After this publication I see it having zero currently substantive effects.  Hell, ICOs have been largely policing themselves as thoughthey DO fall under SEC jurisdiction.  Well, most of the larger/more honest ones have anyway.

Right now this just another juicy FUD bomb, the day they draft regulation or prosecute someone is the day things will truly change.  Even then SEC regulation will likely ultimately bring some stability to the markets, which is a good thing.

Thanks this is helpful. I agree that it seems like a step in the right direction. Just didn't want it messing with my short term plans honestly 😂
sr. member
Activity: 493
Merit: 250
July 25, 2017, 09:17:47 PM
#4
prof emin gur sirer said " SEC's ruling on The DAO is quite specific, and applies pointedly to, well, DAO-like investment funds. Not to all ICOs by a long shot."
this is the source;
https://twitter.com/el33th4xor/status/889978928273772545
sr. member
Activity: 1036
Merit: 311
July 25, 2017, 09:16:52 PM
#3
The memo, at this point, simply adds clarity to what they've evaluated ICOs to be.  It warns of potential for fraud and limited options for restitution if you are defrauded.

After this publication I see it having zero currently substantive effects.  Hell, ICOs have been largely policing themselves as thoughthey DO fall under SEC jurisdiction.  Well, most of the larger/more honest ones have anyway.

Right now this just another juicy FUD bomb, the day they draft regulation or prosecute someone is the day things will truly change.  Even then SEC regulation will likely ultimately bring some stability to the markets, which is a good thing.
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