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GCR Updates: 'Powers That Be' Speaks Out.


Luigi1
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Here's some articles of Dinarian interests...

Treat as rumors.  Not verified.  Your opine.

 

 

 

FROM VARIOUS SOURCES:      THESE QUOTES,RESEARCH, & OPINIONS ARE FROM ASHELEY PROSPER ON X.

ARTICLE:  DEFINITELY WORTH A READ!!

We keep telling you XRP is the one.  But you just won’t listen.  Maybe some of these quotes will help you see the truth.

By Brad Garlinghouse.


“XRP: 

is a bridge currency.  We believe it has the potential to reduce liquidity costs & enable faster, lower-cost cross-border payments.”

Christine Lagarde: (President of the European Central Bank)
“Ripple is doing a lot of work in facilitating exchanges & making sure that there is no need for a central counterparty, but that we know exactly who is doing what & who is exchanging what.”

JP Morgan:
“If Ripple wins SEC lawsuit, XRP is poised for significant adoption.”

Bank of America (2019 Report)
“Ripple’s technology is attractive for its ability to settle cross-border transactions almost instantly.”

David Schwartz:
“XRP was designed to be a better Bitcoin.”

World Economic Forum:
“Ripple’s XRP is one of the most scalable and efficient digital assets available for cross-border payments.”

Jesse Lund (IBM)
“Ripple’s approach with XRP is interesting as it provides a digital asset that can settle in real-time across multiple networks.”

SBI Holdings:
“XRP has the potential to become the global standard in digital currencies for cross-border transactions.”

Chris Larsen:
“We’re working with regulators, we’re working with central banks. I think that’s an important part of our strategy.”

Christine Lagarde:
“Ripple has addressed many of the issues associated with cross-border payments, particularly around speed, transparency & cost-efficiency.”

American Express:
“Ripple offers a compelling proposition in cross-border transactions, reducing settlement times from days to seconds.”

Bank of America:
“Ripple’s solution can potentially bring substantial cost efficiencies in our cross-border transactions.”

Yoshitaka Kitao:
“XRP is the most efficient, scalable digital asset for payments & it plays a pivotal role in the development of new financial infrastructure.”

Cathy Bessant (Bank of America):
“We’ve been in partnership with Ripple for a while. We’re testing & piloting the use of blockchain technology in different areas where we see the potential for immediate value.”

Marc Andreessen (Andreessen Horowitz):
“Ripple’s approach to leveraging blockchain for the financial industry shows immense promise.  The speed and efficiency gains are remarkable.”

Digital Currency Group (DCG):
“Ripple’s innovative approach to cross-border payments is setting new standards in the financial industry & XRP plays a crucial role in this evolution.”

Amazon Web Services (AWS) – Ripple Case Study:
“Ripple provides one frictionless experience to send money globally using the power of blockchain.”

Ross Leckow (IMF)'
“Ripple’s technology can help enhance financial inclusion & improve the efficiency of the global financial system.”

Ripple and Apple’s Collaboration with Interledger Protocol (ILP):
“Apple’s integration of Interledger Protocol, which Ripple helped develop, shows the potential for broader adoption of blockchain technology in mainstream tech ecosystems.”

Google Ventures:
“Ripple’s vision of instant, secure & low-cost global payments aligns with the future of financial services. XRP’s utility as a bridge currency is an integral part of that vision.”

Santander Bank:
“We are excited to leverage Ripple’s technology to provide our customers with faster, more secure international payments, allowing us to stay ahead in the rapidly evolving financial industry.”

Microsoft’s Azure Blockchain Workbench:
“Ripple’s integration with Microsoft’s Azure Blockchain Workbench enables businesses to send & receive cross-border payments with unprecedented speed & security.”

Tom Jessop (President, Fidelity Digital Assets)
“We see Ripple & XRP as one of the more mature & viable digital assets in the market, with a clear use case in cross-border payments.”

 

-Big news from the Seeds of Wisdom team!

We’re expanding and reaching new heights, thanks to the incredible support of Nate (Mr Anonymous) to take this on to help our community. To share valuable insights with even more people, we’re launching a YouTube series! 🎥

 

Our inaugural guest is the knowledgeable Bob Lock who will share his expertise on planning and currency.  Get ready to learn & grow! 💡

Don’t miss this opportunity to gain wisdom from the best!

 

📣 Listen: YouTube —– Date & Time To Be Announced Soon.

Please Like and Subscribe on YouTube

Bob Lock: Link 

 

 

 

-Superstate integrates Chainlink for tokenized treasury fund.

Superstate, a blockchain-based asset management firm, has integrated Chainlink’s technology as it taps into the growing tokenization market.

The asset manager will leverage the Chainlink Data Feeds to bring net asset value data for its tokenized treasury fund on-chain. In the announcement Superstate stated it aims to enhance the composability of its Superstate Short Duration US Government Securities Fund by utilizing Chainlink’s technology.

 

The integration enables the firm to access crucial off-chain data, essential for market pricing, utility, and transparency.

 

-IOTA launches blockchain tool to simplify music rights management.

IOTA has introduced a new blockchain-based tool aimed at simplifying music rights management in the film industry.

 

IOTA (IOTA), a distributed ledger focused on the exchange of value & data, has unveiled a blockchain-driven tool designed to transform the management of music rights in films, addressing what the project describes as a traditionally time-consuming process.

 

The new solution, developed under the European Blockchain Pre-Commercial Procurement initiative & funded by the European Commission, leverages distributed ledger technology to streamline negotiations & secure intellectual property rights more efficiently, according to an Aug. 12 blog announcement.

 

The core of IOTA’s latest solution is the Smart Contracts for Media system, which automates contracts between film producers & rights holders. These smart contracts are self-executing digital agreements, intended to reduce the time traditionally required for negotiations & payment processes.

 

IOTA claims its solution promises to “revolutionize the way intellectual property rights are handled,” enabling producers to select predefined contract templates, make real-time adjustments, & finalize terms digitally.  Once agreed upon, the smart contracts are deployed on the IOTA Smart Contract Chain, ensuring the agreements are immutable.

 

The tool also incorporates non-fungible tokens (NTFs) to represent rights and obligations.  These NFTs contain unique identifiers that link to detailed data stored off-chain using the InterPlanetary File System (IPFS), a decentralized storage solution.

 

 

 

-Coinbase Urges SEC to ‘Abandon’ Its ‘Irrational’ DeFi Exchange Rule.

The SEC’s move to regulate DEXs would make it functionally impossible for DeFi projects to exist in the US, Coinbase wrote Monday.

 

Coinbase once again came out swinging Monday against the U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC’s) yearslong attempt to expand a bureaucratic definition of the word “exchange,” which if successful would bring the DeFi ecosystem firmly under the regulator’s purview.

 

In an eight-page comment submitted to the SEC on Monday, Coinbase Chief Legal Office Paul Grewal chastised the potential rule change as “arbitrary” & “irrational” in several respects & urged the agency to “abandon its effort” to apply the proposed rule to decentralized exchanges (DEXs).

 

Fundamental to Coinbase’s argument against the change is the SEC’s continued refusal to concede that DEXs—which are run by automated, on-chain software (aka smart contracts) with little to no human management—are by definition incapable of complying with rules & standards designed for traditional securities exchanges like the New York Stock Exchange.

 

“DEXs cannot comply with registration & disclosure requirements designed for legacy financial exchanges managed by centralized companies,” Grewal wrote.

 

“And even if DEXs could somehow comply with existing registration and disclosure rules, the Commission does not explain how SEC-registered DEXs could facilitate the trading of digital assets.”

 

Because of these apparent tensions, Coinbase implied in its letter to the SEC today, the agency may well be attempting to outlaw DEXs implicitly, without saying so.

 

“The SEC benefits from robust engagement from the public & will review all comments submitted during the open comment period.  Generally, we respond to comments received as part of the final rulemaking & not beforehand,” an agency spokesperson told Decrypt following the initial publication of this story.

 

Coinbase further accused the SEC of failing to complete a proper cost-benefit analysis of the proposed rule change.  That’s due to the fact that the regulator has only stated in blanket terms that it would regulate exchanges that deal in “crypto asset securities,” without defining which sorts of digital assets constitute securities & which do not.

The SEC’s longstanding refusal to draw such a line—between which cryptocurrencies it views as securities, and which it does not—remains one of the crypto industry’s greatest grievances with the agency. Insteading of putting forth such a framework, the SEC has opted to sue crypto projects it alleges constitute illegal securities offerings, one at a time.

 

The regulator has even, in recent months, appeared to flip-flop on its own views of certain crypto assets.  For over a year, for example, the SEC reportedly secretly considered Ethereum to be a security.  Then, in May, the agency abruptly changed course, approving the trade of spot Ethereum ETFs on Wall Street.

 

Because the SEC has not clearly defined which cryptocurrencies it considers to be securities, Coinbase wrote today, it cannot possibly have properly calculated an accurate cost-benefit analysis determining how much financial activity would fall under its purview if DEXs were regulated like securities exchanges.

 

“The SEC cannot rationally make these calculations without a single, stable view on which digital assets are subject to the securities laws,” Grewal wrote.

 

The SEC has been going after numerous crypto companies for billions of Dollars.   There was an article yesterday with negative comments on CFTC rules too.   Congress needs to get some of those bills passed that define what entity regulates what so America can catch up to other countries regulating our new financial system.   Taking companies to court & fining them billions of dollars is just hindering our progress. 

I found these two bills that were introduced in the Senate two years ago but never passed.

-Senate Bill S. 4760.
Digital Commodities Consumer Protection Act of 2022 (DCCPA).
Introduced in Senate (08/03/2022).

To amend the Commodity Exchange Act to provide the Commodity Futures Trading Commission jurisdiction to oversee the spot digital commodity market & for other purposes.

 

-Senate Bill  S.5030.
Digital Trading Clarity Act of 2022 (DTCA).
Introduced in Senate (09/29/2022).

This bill establishes a safe harbor from securities regulation for certain digital asset exchanges & intermediaries.  This safe harbor applies if (1) such digital asset is not classified as a security by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) or by a U.S. court & (2) the exchange or intermediary complies with requirements regarding listings, customer protection & disclosures.

 

If a digital asset is determined to be a security and otherwise meets these requirements, the exchange or intermediary has a two year period during which the SEC may not pursue specified enforcement activity against the exchange or intermediary.

 

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Here's another article related to the above...Inflation slows...a new formula to calculate GDP, joblessness & inflation...

 

 

-US Inflation Increased By Less Than Expected In July; Adds support For Sept Cut.

U.S. consumer prices increased by less than expected on an annualized basis in July, increasing the likelihood that the Federal Reserve will start cutting interest rates at its next meeting in September.

 

 

The Labor Department’s consumer price index (CPI) rose by 2.9% last month, decelerating slightly from 3.0% in June. Economists had predicted that the figure would match June’s rate.

 

Month-on-month, the reading climbed to 0.2% after actually falling 0.1% last month, matching expectations.

 

“The details of the CPI report were a little disappointing, however, with rent increasing by a bigger 0.5% m/m and OER up 0.4%,” analysts at Capital Economic said, in a note.  “After the more modest gains in June & the sharp slowdown in the all tenant rent index measure of housing inflation, we had expected the weaker June gains to become the new norm.”

 

Stripping out more volatile items like food & fuel, the “core” number climbed by 3.2% in the twelve months to July, below projections of 3.3%. On a monthly basis, underlying price growth inched up to 0.2%, after rising 0.1% in June.

 

“Core goods prices fell more than we expected, led by another large (-2.3%) decline in used vehicle prices. Core services inflation was a bit hotter than anticipated, led by rebounds in inflation for housing, recreation & communication services,” said analysts at Wells Fargo, in a note.

 

“The 0.15% m/m increase in all-items CPI & the 0.18% m/m increase in core CPI in July suggest that the disinflationary trend has firmly reasserted itself, after the temporary relapse in the first quarter,” said Capital Economics.

 

“Overall, July’s CPI report is probably best described as mildly encouraging – it adds support for a 25bp rate cut in September but, at the same time, doesn’t suggest price pressures are collapsing in a way that could warrant a bigger 50bp reduction.”

 

This release followed Tuesday’s cooler-than-expected July producer price index & confirms the generally benign inflationary pressures, which could allow the U.S. central bank to cut its policy rate from the 5.25%-5.50% range it has been in for more than a year.

 

The benchmark stock indices on Wall Street have traded in a mixed fashion Wednesday, after the previous session’s sharp gains, with the blue chip Dow Jones Industrial Average around 0.2% higher, while the broad-based S&P 500 & the tech-heavy NASDAQ Composite traded marginally lower.

 

“Feels like today’s print was pre-traded with yesterday’s PPI,” said analysts at JPMorgan, in a note, “and with the disinflation story intact, tomorrow’s retail sales [number] is necessary to assuage (or confirm) growth concerns.”

 

The payrolls report at the start of the month showed that U.S. jobs growth slowed more than expected in July, heightening fears that the labor market is deteriorating & potentially making the economy vulnerable to a recession.

 

“Today’s data leave the FOMC in a holding pattern & do not settle the 25 bps or 50 bps debate for September,” Wells Fargo added.

 

“The continued steady slowdown in inflation, when paired with the rise in the unemployment rate and deterioration in other labor market indicators, leads us to believe the FOMC will want to move quickly towards a more neutral policy stance in the months ahead,” Wells Fargo added.

 

“As a result, we expect a 50 bps rate cut at the September FOMC meeting, but the decision ultimately may be determined by the August employment report to be released on September 6 & the August CPI report to be released on September 11.”

 

Chair Powell’s expected speech at the Jackson Hole conference on August 23 also looms large as the FOMC weighs the balance of risks to its dual mandate, Wells Fargo noted.

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6 hours ago, Luigi1 said:

Christine Lagarde: (President of the European Central Bank)
“Ripple is doing a lot of work in facilitating exchanges & making sure that there is no need for a central counterparty, but that we know exactly who is doing what & who is exchanging what.”

JP Morgan:
“If Ripple wins SEC lawsuit, XRP is poised for significant adoption.”

this alone should tell you ripple and xrp is no good.....

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2 hours ago, screwball said:

why do you think TRUMP pushes Bitcoin and NOT xrp or ripple???

 

I don't think Trump is well versed on the whole asset class...

Bitcoin was first and it is looked at as a store of value only.....why?

Bitcoin is backed by nothing other than good faith....much like the FIAT USD.....Bitcoin hashing is not green friendly.....XRP is.

 

XRP has a function......

Anything that the USG tries to beat down and bury is likely to be very good....

JMO.     CL 

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9 hours ago, Luigi1 said:

Here's some articles of Dinarian interests...

Treat as rumors.  Not verified.  Your opine.

 

 

 

FROM VARIOUS SOURCES:      THESE QUOTES,RESEARCH, & OPINIONS ARE FROM ASHELEY PROSPER ON X.

ARTICLE:  DEFINITELY WORTH A READ!!

We keep telling you XRP is the one.  But you just won’t listen.  Maybe some of these quotes will help you see the truth.

By Brad Garlinghouse.


“XRP: 

is a bridge currency.  We believe it has the potential to reduce liquidity costs & enable faster, lower-cost cross-border payments.”

Christine Lagarde: (President of the European Central Bank)
“Ripple is doing a lot of work in facilitating exchanges & making sure that there is no need for a central counterparty, but that we know exactly who is doing what & who is exchanging what.”

JP Morgan:
“If Ripple wins SEC lawsuit, XRP is poised for significant adoption.”

Bank of America (2019 Report)
“Ripple’s technology is attractive for its ability to settle cross-border transactions almost instantly.”

David Schwartz:
“XRP was designed to be a better Bitcoin.”

World Economic Forum:
“Ripple’s XRP is one of the most scalable and efficient digital assets available for cross-border payments.”

Jesse Lund (IBM)
“Ripple’s approach with XRP is interesting as it provides a digital asset that can settle in real-time across multiple networks.”

SBI Holdings:
“XRP has the potential to become the global standard in digital currencies for cross-border transactions.”

Chris Larsen:
“We’re working with regulators, we’re working with central banks. I think that’s an important part of our strategy.”

Christine Lagarde:
“Ripple has addressed many of the issues associated with cross-border payments, particularly around speed, transparency & cost-efficiency.”

American Express:
“Ripple offers a compelling proposition in cross-border transactions, reducing settlement times from days to seconds.”

Bank of America:
“Ripple’s solution can potentially bring substantial cost efficiencies in our cross-border transactions.”

Yoshitaka Kitao:
“XRP is the most efficient, scalable digital asset for payments & it plays a pivotal role in the development of new financial infrastructure.”

Cathy Bessant (Bank of America):
“We’ve been in partnership with Ripple for a while. We’re testing & piloting the use of blockchain technology in different areas where we see the potential for immediate value.”

Marc Andreessen (Andreessen Horowitz):
“Ripple’s approach to leveraging blockchain for the financial industry shows immense promise.  The speed and efficiency gains are remarkable.”

Digital Currency Group (DCG):
“Ripple’s innovative approach to cross-border payments is setting new standards in the financial industry & XRP plays a crucial role in this evolution.”

Amazon Web Services (AWS) – Ripple Case Study:
“Ripple provides one frictionless experience to send money globally using the power of blockchain.”

Ross Leckow (IMF)'
“Ripple’s technology can help enhance financial inclusion & improve the efficiency of the global financial system.”

Ripple and Apple’s Collaboration with Interledger Protocol (ILP):
“Apple’s integration of Interledger Protocol, which Ripple helped develop, shows the potential for broader adoption of blockchain technology in mainstream tech ecosystems.”

Google Ventures:
“Ripple’s vision of instant, secure & low-cost global payments aligns with the future of financial services. XRP’s utility as a bridge currency is an integral part of that vision.”

Santander Bank:
“We are excited to leverage Ripple’s technology to provide our customers with faster, more secure international payments, allowing us to stay ahead in the rapidly evolving financial industry.”

Microsoft’s Azure Blockchain Workbench:
“Ripple’s integration with Microsoft’s Azure Blockchain Workbench enables businesses to send & receive cross-border payments with unprecedented speed & security.”

Tom Jessop (President, Fidelity Digital Assets)
“We see Ripple & XRP as one of the more mature & viable digital assets in the market, with a clear use case in cross-border payments.”

 

-Big news from the Seeds of Wisdom team!

We’re expanding and reaching new heights, thanks to the incredible support system" rel="">support of Nate (Mr Anonymous) to take this on to help our community. To share valuable insights with even more people, we’re launching a YouTube series! 🎥

 

Our inaugural guest is the knowledgeable Bob Lock who will share his expertise on planning and currency.  Get ready to learn & grow! 💡

Don’t miss this opportunity to gain wisdom from the best!

 

📣 Listen: YouTube —– Date & Time To Be Announced Soon.

Please Like and Subscribe on YouTube

Bob Lock: Link 

 

 

 

-Superstate integrates Chainlink for tokenized treasury fund.

Superstate, a blockchain-based asset management firm, has integrated Chainlink’s technology as it taps into the growing tokenization market.

The asset manager will leverage the Chainlink Data Feeds to bring net asset value data for its tokenized treasury fund on-chain. In the announcement Superstate stated it aims to enhance the composability of its Superstate Short Duration US Government Securities Fund by utilizing Chainlink’s technology.

 

The integration enables the firm to access crucial off-chain data, essential for market pricing, utility, and transparency.

 

-IOTA launches blockchain tool to simplify music rights management.

IOTA has introduced a new blockchain-based tool aimed at simplifying music rights management in the film industry.

 

IOTA (IOTA), a distributed ledger crypto wallet" rel="external nofollow">ledger focused on the exchange of value & data, has unveiled a blockchain-driven tool designed to transform the management of music rights in films, addressing what the project describes as a traditionally time-consuming process.

 

The new solution, developed under the European Blockchain Pre-Commercial Procurement initiative & funded by the European Commission, leverages distributed ledger crypto wallet" rel="external nofollow">ledger technology to streamline negotiations & secure intellectual property rights more efficiently, according to an Aug. 12 blog announcement.

 

The core of IOTA’s latest solution is the Smart Contracts for Media system, which automates contracts between film producers & rights holders. These smart contracts are self-executing digital agreements, intended to reduce the time traditionally required for negotiations & payment processes.

 

IOTA claims its solution promises to “revolutionize the way intellectual property rights are handled,” enabling producers to select predefined contract templates, make real-time adjustments, & finalize terms digitally.  Once agreed upon, the smart contracts are deployed on the IOTA Smart Contract Chain, ensuring the agreements are immutable.

 

The tool also incorporates non-fungible tokens (NTFs) to represent rights and obligations.  These NFTs contain unique identifiers that link to detailed data stored off-chain using the InterPlanetary File System (IPFS), a decentralized storage solution.

 

 

 

-Coinbase Urges SEC to ‘Abandon’ Its ‘Irrational’ DeFi Exchange Rule.

The SEC’s move to regulate DEXs would make it functionally impossible for DeFi projects to exist in the US, Coinbase wrote Monday.

 

Coinbase once again came out swinging Monday against the U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC’s) yearslong attempt to expand a bureaucratic definition of the word “exchange,” which if successful would bring the DeFi ecosystem firmly under the regulator’s purview.

 

In an eight-page comment submitted to the SEC on Monday, Coinbase Chief Legal Office Paul Grewal chastised the potential rule change as “arbitrary” & “irrational” in several respects & urged the agency to “abandon its effort” to apply the proposed rule to decentralized exchanges (DEXs).

 

Fundamental to Coinbase’s argument against the change is the SEC’s continued refusal to concede that DEXs—which are run by automated, on-chain software (aka smart contracts) with little to no human management—are by definition incapable of complying with rules & standards designed for traditional securities exchanges like the New York Stock Exchange.

 

“DEXs cannot comply with registration & disclosure requirements designed for legacy financial exchanges managed by centralized companies,” Grewal wrote.

 

“And even if DEXs could somehow comply with existing registration and disclosure rules, the Commission does not explain how SEC-registered DEXs could facilitate the trading of digital assets.”

 

Because of these apparent tensions, Coinbase implied in its letter to the SEC today, the agency may well be attempting to outlaw DEXs implicitly, without saying so.

 

“The SEC benefits from robust engagement from the public & will review all comments submitted during the open comment period.  Generally, we respond to comments received as part of the final rulemaking & not beforehand,” an agency spokesperson told Decrypt following the initial publication of this story.

 

Coinbase further accused the SEC of failing to complete a proper cost-benefit analysis of the proposed rule change.  That’s due to the fact that the regulator has only stated in blanket terms that it would regulate exchanges that deal in “crypto asset securities,” without defining which sorts of digital assets constitute securities & which do not.

The SEC’s longstanding refusal to draw such a line—between which cryptocurrencies it views as securities, and which it does not—remains one of the crypto industry’s greatest grievances with the agency. Insteading of putting forth such a framework, the SEC has opted to sue crypto projects it alleges constitute illegal securities offerings, one at a time.

 

The regulator has even, in recent months, appeared to flip-flop on its own views of certain crypto assets.  For over a year, for example, the SEC reportedly secretly considered Ethereum to be a security.  Then, in May, the agency abruptly changed course, approving the trade of spot Ethereum ETFs on Wall Street.

 

Because the SEC has not clearly defined which cryptocurrencies it considers to be securities, Coinbase wrote today, it cannot possibly have properly calculated an accurate cost-benefit analysis determining how much financial activity would fall under its purview if DEXs were regulated like securities exchanges.

 

“The SEC cannot rationally make these calculations without a single, stable view on which digital assets are subject to the securities laws,” Grewal wrote.

 

The SEC has been going after numerous crypto companies for billions of Dollars.   There was an article yesterday with negative comments on CFTC rules too.   Congress needs to get some of those bills passed that define what entity regulates what so America can catch up to other countries regulating our new financial system.   Taking companies to court & fining them billions of dollars is just hindering our progress. 

I found these two bills that were introduced in the Senate two years ago but never passed.

-Senate Bill S. 4760.
Digital Commodities Consumer Protection Act of 2022 (DCCPA).
Introduced in Senate (08/03/2022).

To amend the Commodity Exchange Act to provide the Commodity Futures Trading Commission jurisdiction to oversee the spot digital commodity market & for other purposes.

 

-Senate Bill  S.5030.
Digital Trading Clarity Act of 2022 (DTCA).
Introduced in Senate (09/29/2022).

This bill establishes a safe harbor from securities regulation for certain digital asset exchanges & intermediaries.  This safe harbor applies if (1) such digital asset is not classified as a security by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) or by a U.S. court & (2) the exchange or intermediary complies with requirements regarding listings, customer protection & disclosures.

 

If a digital asset is determined to be a security and otherwise meets these requirements, the exchange or intermediary has a two year period during which the SEC may not pursue specified enforcement activity against the exchange or intermediary.

 

 

Every person and organization listed supporting xrp are well know crooked deepstate players.. 

 

That's all I have to say about that.

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