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RE: Are Most Cryptocurrencies Doomed to Collapse — because they’re “ICO-issued”?

in #cryptocurrency7 years ago

I wonder about that. I'm outside the USA so that doesn't apply for me I think. I also wonder what will happen to the value of erc20's if Ethereum drops say 50%.

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Personal legal culpability might not apply depending on which country you’re in and the state of development of that jurisdiction’s securities regulation (and do note the link I provided to recent news about the EU advancing their regulation to harmonize with the SEC and do note China recently moving to regulate ICOs).

But note the SEC noted that even if you’re outside the USA and you offer for sale or sell illegal securities to USA citizens (even unwittingly and note the SEC wrote “Violations of Section 5 do not require scienter.”), then in their eyes you are have fallen into their jurisdiction and they can prosecute you. And given the cooperation pledged by the G20 for sharing data as of Jan. 1, 2017, it seems that the G20 will honor and aid enforcement of the SEC’s jurisdiction.

They destroy you with legalese because most people have more hubris than diligent study of every word.

Cryptocurrencies are forcing globalization and harmonization of enforcement of regulation.

I’m wary that the market conflagration due to enforcement action presumably coming from the SEC and then eventually other nations will knock the ICO-issued tokens down eventually in price and market acceptance. I predict eventually they will not be taken seriously at all. There is no way I would be buying ICOs (even if I wasn’t a USA citizen) right now with a correction in the cryptocurrency euphoria approaching after this current moonshoot, and then ICOs languishing followed by enforcement actions ongoing incessantly.

If only the G5 do enforcement actions, ICO-issued tokens are dead. Eventually enforcement from G20, and then the rest of the nations falling into harmonization as they did for FATCA. Because the USA and G5 can penalize the other nations if they do not accede to harmonization. C.f. the links I provided in my blog for more details about this.

@‍Traxo wrote at BCT:

It's implausible to expect that millions of ICO investors worldwide[…]

There aren't millions.
ICO issuers buy the ICO from themselves to make the illusion of significant interest, while thus pre-mining most of the tokens to themselves.

Probably less than 10,000 ICO investors of any significant amount.
I agree the regulators probably won't waste their effort to go after those who are only speculating with their lunch money.

The people who need to pay attention are those who have significant amount of money tied up in "ICO-issued" tokens.
They had better think carefully about this.

Also the potential fines and jail time is not the only threat.
The other threat is the collapse in the price of these "ICO-issued" tokens.

This post foreshadows the collapse of ICO-issued tokens or the collapse of their price? Collapse of ICO-issued tokens would mean these tokens become illegal and non fungible which then leads to the collapse, making them worthless.

Both.

But please also read my recent thoughts about caveats.

Sure, I will do that.

nobody really cares about the USA and their stupid tax laws. US Crypto trading citizens should give up their citizenship and move to other tax free countries..

The USA is still dominant and dictating the (financial) rules in most of the Western World. If you mean that these rules won't stop the cryptocurrency/'decentralised exchange of value' wave, I concur.

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